Ozark Seed Bank & Free Seed Giveaway!

in #gardening7 years ago (edited)

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Sometimes in life we have the blessing to meet very special people.

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In 2016, after we had just moved to the Ozarks and I was researching Lyme Disease as ticks are very bad here, I found out that Astragalus is a very good Chinese immunity boosting medicine to strengthen one’s system. Stephen Harrod Buhner is my main go-to for researching and understanding Lyme from an herbalist perspective. He also has a handful of other books (buy them all!) that I believe are truly amazing and should be on every bookshelf. Herbal Antibiotics is one and as I was reading the section on Astragalus, I read a little blurb on how to grow Astragalus well, and he sited it from Elixir Farm in Missouri. Oh! I thought, where is that? Turns out it is in our county!

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As my relationship with this very special individual, Vinnie, from Elixir deepens, Ini and I have come to be a part of one of her creations that she started in the 80s, The Ozark Seed Bank. We drove by the Ozark Seed Bank when we were looking for land and went WHAT! We have to meet those people!

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Vinnie has had some incredible people flow through Elixir over the years (and live there and co-create projects). One such person is Steven Foster, the stunningly talented plant photographer – you’ll see his name on the Peterson Field Guide for Medicinal Plants and Herbs as he took all the photos and co-authored with David Duke! He’s also traveled the world working with plants and contributed over the years to many successful (and now big) herbal businesses.

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About two months ago, Steven came to speak at the Ozark Seed Bank, which is also known under its non-profit name One Garden (OG). Website: http://www.onegarden.org/

It was a really special night as Steven walked us through hundreds of gorgeous plant slides and reminisced on his time spent in the Ozarks. I don’t think I can say this for any other presentation I’ve ever listened to, but my attention was seriously engaged for every slide! That’s how interesting his life in the world of plants has been.

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(Steven and Ini IDing some plants)

Today Ini and I went over to OG to go through the extensive seed collection there. Seeds of Change’s Alan Kapuler is good friends with Vinnie and he donated his entire “Deep Diversity” collection to the seed bank. You can imagine our excitement as two plant geeks when Vinnie offered that we could use the seeds from the bank! This fulfills our lifetime dream of stewarding human/plant connection and introducing and popularizing diverse perennial and rare plants. Synergy!

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(Refrigerated Seed Vault at OG)

We went there today after I looked through the selections and found some very intriguing (some I hadn’t even heard of) plants. I mostly focused on greens able to take the cold, or interesting varieties of plants I already have, like the Montagmy Dandelion. It’s basically a selected cultivar from France with bigger roots and leaves.

A few more unique selections that caught my eye:

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The seed collection has thousands of seeds and we are so abundantly grateful to Vinnie (who donated her entire Chinese seed collection- that’s a story for another day), Seeds of Change and all of the humans throughout time who have collected seed from a plant they liked, carried it with them for a time, and passed it on. We are who we are because of these ancestors and the plants we are so familiar with today, are intricately connected to our human story. This is truly mind boggling when we take some time to dwell on it, and a true blessing!

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As GMOs and Monsanto seek to change the scope of seed saving all around the world and, as a result, many farmers commit suicide, lose their livelihoods, and cannot afford the seed they now must buy after farming and saving seeds since the dawn of agriculture, seed banks and people who save and share seed are more important than ever!

For the OG, we are trying to give back and participate so we are taking many of these seeds that haven’t been propagated since the 90’s and letting them go to seed so we can refresh the seed banks. It’s a win/win, we get to have this incredible biodiversity, rare plants from around the world, and nutrient rich seed varieties and the Ozark Seed Bank gets some new energy.

This is the power of seeds, anyone can grow the plants, save them and SHARE them. The earth is truly abundant, it is human civilization as it currently stands that works in scarcity mentalities and zero sum realities.

So So grateful to the seeds and people who save and share them!!!

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If you like this post and are also interested in sharing the love between plants and humans, resteem this post and write one reason you love plants below. That will enter you into into our Free Giveaway (3 winners pulled on Dec 15th! In USA only due to customs, sorry.). We are giving away three packets of Japanese Gobo which is a cultivated edible burdock. You might be familiar with the common burdock, and this burdock has tastier smaller roots that are very easy to grow and delicious! Incredibly popular in Japan! Share Seeds! Inspiration to pass on the Gift!

Have you ever visited a seed bank or do you have one near you? We need more of them all over!

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This post has received gratitude of 1.00 % from @jout

You got a 0.27% upvote from @postpromoter courtesy of @jout!

This was a very interesting post! We have been trying to get more heirloom seeds to incorporate into our garden and are wanting to experiment to find which ones we like best. Does this seed vault ever sell any of the seeds they grow? If so, is there a way to see what ones? Thanks

They don't sell the seeds, but we may have some initiatives this summer to share the seeds in some way. Still working it out and not exactly sure how yet :)

I understand. I saw a program on a local station in my area that was talking about a man who collected what appeared to be thousands of seeds. It got me interested in trying some of the older heirloom seeds, instead of using the hybrids that are so popular today. With all the interest in homesteading, I am sure that you will have several people in that area interested in your seed sharing program. Best of luck!

Beautiful. Seeds are freedom! Thank you for sharing this. I love it!

:) couldn't agree more; power to the people!

@mountainjewel, what a nice story and great thing you are doing to keep these genetics alive! I want to let you know that I've linked to your post from Cryptocurrencies Are Just Like Mother Nature's Seeds - An Essay of Abundance, Diversity and Collaboration

Thanks!

Also great article- I've had a lot of similar thoughts on that wavelength! Cool time to be alive :)

Thank you @mountainjewel! I agree, its exciting and extremely interesting to say the least.

Seeing all those labeled bags of seeds, imagining the hands and backs that worked to start and care for the palnts that produced them, makes me emotional. I know it’s silly, but I really love seeds.

I looked around the website a little. I’d love to do a seed trial, but that link isn’t working. Maybe my husband and I could just plan a day trip there!

I feel ya! It's a total labor of love to give abundant thanks for! Perhaps you could come for our next speaker? Ini is going to lead a sprouting workshop. Do you live close to southern Missouri?

I'm in southwest Missouri. We're just about two and a half hours from there. When is the next speaker and the workshop?

Not sure yet- I'll keep ya posted ;)

Hey, thanks!

We also live in the Ozarks, and when we moved here, we were shocked by the number of ticks. At first, we, too, were concerned about the number of ticks. And then I did a bit more research about the unequal spread of Lyme disease. To make this map, they tested dogs for antibodies to the Lyme disease microbe. This map shows the percentage of dogs who tested positive for these antibodies (and so where you have a high risk of getting it from a tick). To our surprise, our area had a 0% rate. This map might help you rest a bit better if you are in the Ozarks. :)

http://www.goodhousekeeping.com/health/wellness/news/a44165/lyme-disease-map/?zoomable

Oh, and I love it that there is such a cool seed saving place here in the Ozarks. :)

Thanks for the link! I've been searching for statistics to no avail.

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