Seed Snobs

Alan Bishop on Bishop’s Homegrown blog made a great post recently, and introduced the idea of ‘seed snobs’.  I like that term, and I want to talk about it a little bit here.  It has a lot to do with the Blogger’s Seed Network and heirloom gardening in general.

As bloggers I think we are all seed snobs in our own way.  For example me who can’t talk about anything but heirloom and OP seeds.  Some people are very committed to national varieties, in Europe this is in part thanks to seed laws that make many national varieties illegal, providing a point for us to focus our energy on.  Other people only want to source seeds locally, perhaps because they don’t believe in buying and transporting things long distance, or hope to get varieties better suited to the local climate.  Others want to support local businesses by buying seeds from them.  Perhaps we are all a little afraid of the bio-technology in the US, and would avoid seeds from there at all costs, in case they might be contaminated.  Perhaps other people are on the other side of the spectrum, only growing commercial seeds because they don’t want to grow anything weird.

I have a lot of respect for everyone who draws the line somewhere on what seeds they grow, and while I might not agree with them all, I do see there is a line of logic behind all of these decisions.  I think most of you reading this blog by now also accept where I draw the line.

Speaking to the Masses

I think one of the reasons we all have these lines we draw when it comes to the kinds of seeds we plant, is we are all kind of ordinary people, most of us without PhDs, just trying to get on with things in our garden.  We need to think in relatively simple ways.  As most of you who read this blog know, I try very hard to both provide useful information, but also present things in a way that everyone can understand.

This means I sometimes have to speak in cliches like ‘You should only grow OP seeds’.

The subject of heirloom gardening goes much deeper than that, but I am not an academic or scientist, and I am not trying to precisely define the subject.  I’m not a journalist with an editor as a boss, writing for a publication with an editorial policy.  I’m just one person, trying to get information out in a way I think is most useful to people reading this blog, in a way I think they would enjoy reading it.

While I’m aware the subject is much deeper than the way I present it, I don’t make any apologies for that.

I’m very committed to the premise that you have as good or better chance of success in the garden with OP seeds than with commercial varieties.  I also believe in the promotion of heirloom and heritage varieties.  As a gardener you simply don’t need to know any more than this if you don’t want to!  If other things you read about plant breeding or seed saving make you nervous, you don’t need to pay attention to them.

If you’re not sure you’re saving seeds correctly, you shouldn’t share them with others, but there is no reason you can’t plant them yourself and expect at least a degree of success.

I think it’s just as important people starting with vegetable gardening should have support and encouragement, as people who want to do their own plant breeding should also have access to good information.

The Whole Truth

Agriculture and the way people grew their own food was very different 100 years ago, and there are some complicated aspects of the subject.  You need to understand some of these to see more successes in your garden.  I write about many of these from time to time, and there are many other sources of information both out on the Internet and in some well written books.

After you get and plant heirloom or OP seeds in your garden, and you want to improve on your results, you will need to understand how to properly save seeds to avoid cross pollination and maintain genepool size.  After this you need to understand how to identify desirable traits and selectively save seeds for these.  Then you may want to understand how to do large scale growouts in order to preserve and maintain existing varieties, or cross pollinating and breeding to make new varieties.  Truth be told, all these things have some complexities associated with them.

In fact, there is there’s almost no such thing as an heirloom food plant variety.  All plants change over time, and what we plant now is different than what was grown 100 years ago.  If it wasn’t a little different, it probably wouldn’t grow well.  The climate has changed, and there are different plant diseases around now than were in the past.  In fact it happens that plant varieties are taken out of genebanks after being in storage for a long time, only to find out they don’t grow well anymore.  Someone then has to try to bring these varieties up to date by doing a large scale growout and selection, something that then changes the nature of the variety.

Modern Heirlooms

What everyone seems to also forget, as they are looking hard for more and more heirloom varieties to grow, is they were all at one time created by a plant breeder using traditional methods.  What’s just as critical a problem as the loss of national heirloom varieties, is the loss of knowledge of traditional breeding techniques.  There are very few people around making new plant varieties in this way, so called ‘modern heirlooms’.  Modern heirloom varieties are just as important as older ones, and it’s very important we promote these as well.

America

Also what everyone needs to understand is just how important North America is in general, but the US specifically.  This is true for the past, present and future of traditional plant varieties.  Historically, people travelled from all over the world and brought their seeds with them.  This resulted in the largest collection of seeds in the world.  There have never been any seed laws with white lists, like there are in most other places in the world, meaning to some degree the traditions of seed saving and plant breeding managed to survive there.

Whatever our feelings may be about modern bio-technology, this part of the world remains the most important resource of knowledge, traditional plant varieties and genetic resources anywhere.  It’s going to remain the most important resource for the foreseeable future, because it takes time to transfer these things elsewhere, even under the best of circumstances.

While we are all concerned about the contamination from GM technology, there are few people more concerned than traditional plant breeders.  Great lengths have been taken to protect stocks of plant varieties in the US.  US seed company Baker Creek tested their collection of corn varieties last year, one of the most susceptible crops to cross pollination, and found 0% contamination!  There were no detectable GMOs anywhere in their collection.  That’s really quite an accomplishment.  Even here in Europe, the debate continues on what the acceptable level should be, currently at 0,9%.

Everyone should keep their head about them, and ask lots of questions if you have them, but no one should have any special fears over plant varieties that originate in the US that come from traditional plant breeding techniques and from a trustworthy source.  They are probably freer of GM or other genetic contamination than coming from other places.

What Should the Average Gardener Do?

Worry about learning to garden first.  Get a good garden going, learn things like mulching and composting.  Get some non-commercial seeds to start with.  Non-commercial seeds are ones that either come from a seed company that states a clear policy of never selling any other kind of seed (see seed source links on the front page of this blog), or from a gardener who knows what they are doing and has saved seeds from their own plants.  Don’t forget to check out the Seed Network!

When you are ready to take the next step, start looking into some of the other topics mentioned in this post.

Don’t forget to ask lots of questions, and look for other gardeners to help you along the way.

2008/2009 Seeds Offered

I’ve just put my list of seeds up I am offering as part of the Bloggers Seed Network.

I’ve combined my seed list with the current list of other people offering seeds, and put it under a link on the top of the front page of the blog labelled ‘Seed Network‘.

Have a look and let me know if you are interested in anything.  When I have a chance, I’ll put in links for the seed varieties to posts I’ve made about them, but in the meantime you can probably search this blog to find some things out about most of what I offer.

Reasons for a Seed Network

I recently proposed a Blogger Seed network, and a number of people have stepped forward and offered seeds for this.

I wanted to take some time now in this post to talk about some of the reasons why such a network is so very important. It’s important gardeners should step forward and offer their seeds, but it’s just as important other gardeners should also step forward and grow these seeds.

If you’re a blogger, and can write about your experiences, so much the better, but it’s not necessary to have a blog to participate.

These seeds are for everyone!

Many gardeners, perhaps most often people new to gardening, are afraid to grow anything but seeds that come in a purchased packet.

Growing seeds that come from someone else’s garden are for people of all levels of experience. Beginning gardeners as well as experienced can grow wonderful things with self saved seeds. There is nothing that makes these seeds fundamentally inferior to commercial seeds, and there are often advantages. Any time you grow something it can go wrong, and growing garden or farm saved seeds is no exception. There is, however, no reason you should be afraid to grow non-commercial seeds, and there is not particularly any greater chance of failure or disappointment.

It’s possible to save seeds incorrectly but of the people so far who have offered seeds or other plant material listed on the post linked to above, I have a great deal of confidence that there are not many problems with their seeds. Over time, we will all have to help each other save seeds properly, and be prepared to address quality issues with one another. I’ll be making further posts on this topic.

The Past

There was a time saving seeds was a threat to seed companies, in particular before WWII. After all, if you are a gardener or farmer why would you pay for seeds you can get free from someone else or from your own plants? People were not just saving seeds, but also breeding plants in their own gardens for free, making it difficult for seed companies to justify paying someone to do the same thing. There was simply not much money in seeds, and running a profitable seed or plant research company was difficult to do.

The need for research was particularly acute during the war years, when the world was facing food shortages and research was needed to find ways to boost food production.

A number of mechanisms were put in place to deal with this problem, and were different depending on where in the world you lived. Some of the more universal principles included patents on plants, seeds and the genes they contain. Most places established licensing for seed companies. Commercial hybrid seeds were developed in part to make it difficult or impossible for these seeds to be saved and regrown. Since most countries subsidise their agriculture, rules were put on these subsidies that promoted purchased over saved seeds.

While the ideas behind all of this weren’t entirely bad, it’s truly amazing what this has all become in modern times. Now we have GMOs. We have seed companies like Monsanto who actively promote their crops, knowing their genes will contaminate crops of other farms, so they can then sue farmers who save and regrow these contaminated seeds! Included in these genes contaminating the environment are the so called ‘terminator’ genes, that can cause contaminated plants to stop reproducing. A very dangerous battle has developed over who has the right to grow the food in today’s world, and who owns it.

The Future

In most places outside of North America, Europe in particular, seed companies selling non-commercial seeds suitable for seed saving are operating outside of the law. That’s right, they’re selling illegal seeds! These seeds are not in any way unsafe, in fact many of the varieties are the same ones our ancestors ate. They are illegal because all those years ago laws were set up to protect seed companies and make their operations profitable.

This year in France, Kokopelli Seeds was fined €30,000 for selling illegal seeds, leaving them with an almost insurmountable debt for a small seed company. In the long run they will not be able to underwrite these kinds of fines and remain in business.

This year Real Seeds of the UK had to delay packaging their seeds because of a series of threats from local authorities, leaving them unsure if they were about to be shut down. Okay there’s no €30,000 fine as was the case with Kokopelli, and they weren’t shut down, but how can anyone expect a seed company to operate under those circumstances?

It’s likely every seed company of this nature operating in Europe is being harassed in this way, and it’s going mostly unnoticed because of their small size and because the harassment is difficult to quantify. It’s just not the stuff newspaper headlines are made of.

Just how fair is it anyway that companies like this have to operate largely out of the goodness of their own hearts, without any hope of ever seeing profits and sometimes having to pay fines out of pocket in order to stay in business? Weren’t these laws put in place all these years ago intended to protect and promote seed companies?

Different but related circumstances face small seed companies almost everywhere in the world.

It’s time for harassment of small seed companies to stop!

The Bloggers Seed Network

What was once a threat to seed companies, home and farm saved seeds, is quickly becoming the only hope for many small seed companies. The only way to protect these seed companies, and our right to grow the seeds they sell, is to do what many years ago was destroying them.

The only way these seed companies will be able to exist in our modern world is along side an alternative distribution network for seeds that is so big and well established, that it makes the what these companies sell unimportant and therefore no longer a target for governments and larger seed companies. This is why I am proposing a bloggers seed network.

We have to make self saved seeds a common household word.

This network has the greatest chance of success if it spans as many legal jurisdictions as possible, and does not depend on any one point of organization. It should interconnect with as many other seed sharing networks as possible that already exist, or emerge as the result of the hard work others put in. It will depend on participants working together to make use of legal loopholes, and getting around local rules from other jurisdictions. It requires us all to realize that while we have different goals in our own gardens, reaching out and working with others on common goals is important too. It means you have to take the time to search out other seed saving individuals and communities over the Internet, regardless of their size and location, and promote trade with them.

Local is important too.  Beginning with your garden, together with friends and neighbors, and local seed swaps are all important. It’s the nature of home saved seeds that your chances of success are greatest with locally produced seeds. Whatever you do, don’t forget the importance of reaching out to other seed savers in other parts of the world.

Many of us who have been active on the Internet know similar global action has successfully taken on software giants like Microsoft, as well as the music and film industry. Democracy has taken on new meanings with globalization and the emergence of the Internet, and now we need to apply some of these principles to the food we eat.

Grandpa’s Home Pepper

This plant came to me from Lieven.

This is a Siberian pepper, breed specially for overwintering indoors.  The plant sits comfortably on our kitchen windowsill, and the highest point is about 50cm.

Since coming indoors a few weeks ago it’s really started blooming and looks set to start growing lots of tiny fiery hot peppers.

I remember having a plant sort of like this only smaller as a kid.  What I remember was the peppers were just so killer hot and the taste wasn’t very nice anyway, so they just weren’t nice to eat.

These peppers on the other hand so far seem a lot nicer to eat.  We’ve only cooked with them once, and it’s clear we don’t need to be too afraid of the heat.   While we could certainly taste it and it was nice, we would use more next time.

It’s the difference between what was almost certainly an F1 hybrid breed to look nice that I grew as a kid, and this OP version which someone almost certainly breed to taste nice!  This one looks pretty nice too, except for being a little bug eaten from the garden.

Blogger Seed Network Addition

A blog to add to the post I made a few weeks ago on bloggers who share seeds from their gardens is Bishop’s Homegrown.

This is a great new blog, located in Indiana, USA, I stumbled across after following a link on Agricultural Biodiversity. Not only do they do their own plant breeding, they sell their creations at local farmers markets!

I don’t honestly spend as much time as I should hunting out new blogs, and instead hope they find me somehow or that I read about them on other blogs.  It’s when I find ones like this that has gone unnoticed for a year that makes me realize I need to spend more time looking around the Internet.

Bishop’s Homegrown seeds are different from others in our Bloggers seed lists in that they are mostly from ongoing breeding projects, and so you may still see some genetic differences in the plants grown from his seeds.  Some of what he offers seem to be stabilized new varieties.  For those of you who know Lieven, some of the seeds he offers are similar, and of course these are also the sort of pea seeds Rebsie is working on and melon seeds Søren is working on.  As long as you understand what to expect, it’s potentially an exciting opportunity to experience some genetic variation in your garden without having to do the cross-pollinating yourself.  It’s a great opportunity to do some selection and create your own variety.  It also gives you some insight on what another plant breeder is working on.

Like all the other seeds offered via the Bloggers Seed Network, these seeds are for everyone!  You don’t need to be a plant geek or have a blog, you just need to be a little adventurous and interested in trying them in your own garden.

I’m still waiting on an answer from an email where I asked if he will send his seeds outside of the US, but regardless of his policy on this he is still offering them to people within the US.