Gardening Trends

Last year there was a post on KGI showing trends in home garden food production in the US. There was a stunning 20% decline between 2004 and 2005. This comes amidst all the concerns over GM foods. Even with all the concerns over E Coli, there is no indication yet this trend is reversing. This trend is almost certainly world wide.

The situation is very similar for heirloom vegetable gardening and seed saving. The Seed Savers Exchange reported a 5.5% decrease in the number of members offering seeds to other members. This comes after 10 straight years of decline, 36% in total since 1995. Here too there is no indication this trend is reversing.

Many people find this very hard to believe. There has been so much attention paid to this in recent years, and so many people want to eat more natural and handmade foods. Many people are willing to pay large amounts of money for organic or free-range foods. Many people have discovered the joys of heirloom tomatoes and are growing them in their garden.

The problem is three-fold. First, few people actually make the step from growing heirloom tomatoes, to saving the seeds and sharing them with other people or replanting them. Few people actually make the step from heirloom tomatoes to other heirloom vegetables.

The second problem is that heirloom gardening by definition has it’s origins from before WWII. This was 65 years ago, and the number of people still alive and able to garden from this time is quickly declining. There simply are not enough younger people getting into heirloom gardening. As well as losing the people who actually do the work of heirloom gardening, we are losing all the knowledge and experience of these people.

The third problem is there were a large number of heirloom gardeners in the former Soviet Union, because for them it was a means of survival. With a flood of cheap imported foods, this way of life is quickly disappearing.

It’s been estimated that since WWII 70% of fruit and vegetable varieties have been lost, simply because people stopped growing them and no one saved the seeds.

Increasingly as the European Union expands, and more countries enter in to the so called ‘Free Trade Agreements’, heirloom vegetables are becoming less available. This is because these treaties establish patent rights on seeds and plants, and in many cases prohibit the sale of unpatented varieties. Even when the sale of unpatented varieties is not prohibited, growers often benefit from large subsidies for growing patented varieties and wholesale purchasers often refuse to purchase unpatented varieties. This means, when they are available, heirloom vegetables are often unrealistically priced. Grain is an organization that tracks these treaties and trade agreements, and which countries have implemented seed patents.

In Europe we have seed laws that in most cases prohibit the sale of heirloom seeds and foods. Many people are now working on trying to change these laws, and some progress is being made on this. Nearly all of these efforts are targeted at legalizing heirloom fruits and vegetables for home gardening and informal trading, and there is little prospect these foods will become available on a wide scale commercial basis.

In recent years there have been treaties to promote biodiversity, and insure funding for botanical gardens, the Doomsday Seed Bank and other stores of genetic material. While this is very important, and these can often be positive developments, these seed stores often come with the price of commercial ownership of the seeds and access to the general public is not assured.

It’s more clear than ever before that the only way we will be guaranteed access to heritage foods is if we grow them ourselves, in our own gardens and save and trade the seeds. It’s more important than ever that people take it upon themselves to grow and save seeds from heirloom crops, or they will simply not be there for future generations.

When planning your garden for 2007 why not grow some heirloom vegetables with the intention of saving seeds? You will be surprised at what a concerted effort it takes to do this. Seed saving can be thwarted by crop failures or accidents, and it can take several years to get a system in place for seed saving and storage. If you are new to vegetable gardening, it will take time to learn this as well. Don’t be discouraged or surprised if this all takes a while to get going.

Seed Buying – Method or Madness?

Carol on May Dreams Gardens made a thought provoking post about seed buying. She asked a series of questions, and suggested the answers could show a lot about the kind of gardener you are. Here are my answers.

What kind of a seed buyer are you?

I don’t buy many seeds, and in any case fewer and fewer each year. I save my own seeds, and trade with others. When I save my own seeds, I find the plants improve over time as they become acclimated to my garden and so become better than any purchased seed. I also find seed exchanges offer much more variety and more interesting seeds than commercial sources.

It can be cheaper and easier to purchase seeds, and in cases where saving seeds is more trouble than it’s worth, I certainly do buy them.

Do you carefully read all of the seed catalogs sent to you and then browse the Internet to compare and contrast all the options, then decide which seeds to buy?

I usually pick up seed catalogs to search for specific items, rather than read them from cover to cover. I am much more likely to use the Internet than seed catalogs, and I have several standard companies I order seeds from. I am always on the lookout for the best prices and lowest shipping and handling costs.

Do you buy seeds from ‘bricks and mortar’ stores and get whatever appeals to you as you are browsing?

Almost never. I grow heirloom seeds, and stores usually don’t have these or anything else I find interesting. Maybe if I wanted a package of herb seeds or something else very common, I would purchase these.

Do you buy vegetable seeds in bulk where they scoop them out of seed bins, weigh them and put them in hand-marked envelopes?

I’ve never seen this before.

Do you buy seeds for just vegetables, or just annual flowers? Do you buy seeds for perennial flowers?

Mostly vegetables, grains and herbs. Occationally annual flowers.

Do you know what stratification and scarification are? Have you done either or both with seeds?

I must admit, I have read some answers from other people, otherwise I might not have recognized these techniques by name. Stratification, cold treatment, yes. Scarification, cutting the seed coat, no. I sometimes also soak seeds in water to soften the coats.

Do you order seeds from more than one seed company to save on shipping or buy from whoever has the seeds you want, even if it means paying nearly the same for shipping as you do for the actual seeds?

Since living in Holland means almost all of my seeds are sent internationally, I almost always end up paying much more for shipping and handling than the price of the seeds. Within some limits, if there is a particular seed I want, I just pay whatever it costs to send it. There are also a few companies I order seeds from every year, and I try to get as many of my seed purchases into these orders as possible to avoid extra shipping costs.

Do you buy more seeds than you could ever sow in one season?

Always!

Do you only buy seeds to direct sow into the garden or do you end up with flats of seedlings in any window of the house with decent light?

Every year I have a room full of seedlings under a growlight ready to transplant in the spring.

Do you save your own seeds from year to year and exchange them with other seed savers?

Always.

Do you even buy seeds?

I think almost everyone buys at least a few.

Do you have a fear of seeds? Some gardeners don’t try seeds, why not?

I am not afraid of seeds!

Do you understand seeds? I once bought seeds at a Walmart in January (Burpee Seeds) and the cashier asked me, “Do these really work? Yes, they do. “Isn’t it too cold to plant them now?” Well, yes, if you are planning to plant them outside. I don’t think this cashier grew up around anyone who gardened.

I understand seeds!

Do you list all your seeds on a spreadsheet, so you can sort the list by when you should sow them so you have a master seed plan of sorts?

Not usually a spreadsheet, usually a text file or notes scribbled on a piece of paper. What else are you supposed to do in February?

Really, I’m terrible when it comes to keeping other gardening records.

Do you keep all the old seeds and seed packets from year to year, scattered about in various drawers, boxes, and baskets?

In at least 20 places around my house.

Do you determine germination percentage for old seed?

If I suspect a problem, or if I am giving saved seed to someone else, I usually do a germination test.

Blog Updates

With the new year comes some blog housekeeping.

I have updated my contact information with a new email address, so if any of you have kept my old one in an address book or other list, please make sure to get the new one.

In the coming days or weeks I plan to overhaul my blogroll. For sure I will be deleting links to blogs that no longer appear to be active, or where the owners have publicly stated intentions to pursue other projects. I will also probably delete some others whose posts aren’t very gardening related, or don’t really seem to have much affinity with this blog. If I delete your link and you want to know why or want me to reconsider, please send me an email and I will probably put it back.

Of course I will also be looking for interesting new blogs or other sites to link to.

I really have a hard time knowing what to put in my blogroll. The most important thing of course is I strive to keep the crap out, and list interesting blogs that are relevant to this one. There are so many blogs to choose from, and picking the best ones is really hard. Of course I try to list any that have an heirloom plant element or theme. I often link to blogs that link to me, sometimes only to reciprocate, but more often because it seems like we really do have something in common. I usually link to blogs whose owners post frequent and on topic comments here. I sometimes add a link just because someone sends me an email and asks me to.

If anyone has any suggestions on sites to add or remove, or in any other way improve the quality or organization of the blogroll, please let me know.

Garden Blog X Factor

What makes a good gardening blog?

Lynsey on Marginalia recently posted about his quest to find a good gardening blog. He explained how bloggers increase search engine rankings of an otherwise uninteresting blog by creating irrelevant external links. Some bloggers use ‘splogs’ which are blogs set up purely for generating spam links to their own blogs. These frivolous links pollute services like Google or Technorati, and make it harder to find quality blogs.

We don’t know any garden bloggers that pollute search engines, do we?

So what was Lynsey’s conclusion?

“All I’m trying to find is a couple of gardening blogs, well written, frequently updated, nicely photographed etc. I tried to get some sense out of Google, tried some blogrolls – but in the end, while I’m more than prepared to fight for your right to have another kitten blog, it’s not what I want right now, and I just haven’t found one that delivers the goods yet. I think ultimately I’ll just write my own…”

What are we missing? What is that special ingredient which makes a good garden blog? What can we do to draw attention to good blogs, and away from mediocre ones? Is garden blogging dead? Is it just that Lynsey is in the middle of a New Zealand summer while those of us in the northern hemisphere have just passed the winter solstice, so there is nothing to blog about?

Are we just always going to suck, or is there some hope for us?