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Urban Seed Saving: Best Practices for City and Suburbs
Urban Seed Saving: Best Practices for City and Suburbs
Urban Seed Saving: Best Practices for City and Suburbs
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Urban Seed Saving: Best Practices for City and Suburbs

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About this ebook

Plant. Harvest. Collect. Repeat.

How would you like to enjoy your favorite variety of garden vegetables year after year?

You can. Even if you live in the city. Or the suburbs.

This comprehensive guide will show you how to collect the seeds in your garden this year, so you can reap the mouth-watering benefits next year, too.

Urban Seed Saving is a part of the ABUNDANT HARVESTS SERIES. It shows you the possibilities based on the assets of your current garden.

This guide will help you discover the science and art of saving the seeds you need. You will get practical, workable answers so you can join the seed revolution.

Some experts believe that the future of preserving heirloom varieties lies in city gardens. Why not design your garden today?

Why should you believe this author?
Joanne Poyourow has grown vegetables for more than two decades and loves figuring out yummy ways to cook them.

She distilled the recommendations of Seed Savers Exchange, the Organic Seed Alliance, and others, to create a guide that is specifically for seed saving in the city.

Joanne is the co-founder of Cityscape Seeds, a micro-scale seed enterprise in Los Angeles. Urban Seed Saving is part of the Abundant Harvests series, which is devoted to the question:

How can you achieve abundant harvests of rich, nourishing vegetables within a tight city footprint without a lot of gardener time and without having to buy a lot of stuff?

What you will learn in this easy-to-read and tastefully formatted guide:

• Why urban seed saving is different
• Which seeds are worth saving
• How to recognize the seed saving assets of your garden
• How to select the appropriate species
• How to keep accurate records
• Which seed cleaning tools are favored and why
• How to preserve varietal purity
• How to store seeds
• Which locations are safe for specific plants
• What to do about population and diversity issues
• And much more ...

Buy a copy of this straightforward instructional book and find delicious and nutritious success tomorrow. Gift a copy to a friend.

Get it now.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateSep 3, 2019
ISBN9780463125687
Urban Seed Saving: Best Practices for City and Suburbs
Author

Joanne Poyourow

Joanne Poyourow explores sustainable solutions. Her home garden is an edible landscape and an urban wildlife habitat. In 2004 she co-founded the Environmental Change-Makers community group in Los Angeles.With the change-makers she has built two community gardens and a community-scale, wood-fired bread oven. And since 2008 she has managed the plantings at the Community Garden at Holy Nativity, which grows vegetables for the local food pantry.Joanne finds delicious ways to cook those abundant vegetables. She is a passionate seed-saver, and for relaxation she knits insanely complex lace patterns.She is on Instagram @ecmJoanne

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    Book preview

    Urban Seed Saving - Joanne Poyourow

    Urban Seed Saving

    Best Practices for City and Suburbs

    JOANNE POYOUROW
    Part of the Abundant Harvests series:
    High-Yield Vegetable Gardening for City Spaces
    Change-Making Publications

    URBAN SEED SAVING

    Second edition CC 2018 by Joanne Poyourow

    ISBN 9780463125687

    This ebook is published under the Creative Commons license: Non-commercial, attribution, share-alike.

    Additional copies are available via www.change-making.com

    Contents

    Easy seed saving

    |1| Urban seed saving

    Cityscape seeds - my story

    Why urban seed saving is different

    Three kinds of urban gardens

    |2| Seed saving objectives

    Which seeds are worth saving?

    Why are we concerned about GMOs?

    Save the story with the seeds

    |3| Pollination basics

    Selfers versus Crossers

    Botanic names

    Varieties

    Saving for variety vs. saving for species

    Plant families

    |4| Preserving varietal purity

    The Species Method

    Isolation distances

    Get to know your neighbors

    Timing methods

    Alternate year grow-outs

    Early and Late

    Physical barrier methods

    Solid barriers

    Permeable barriers

    Caging

    Alternate-day caging

    Blossom bagging or blossom taping

    Population size

    Selection and Roguing

    Eat your mistakes

    |5| Urban Safe Harbors for specific plants

    Brassicas

    Chard and beets

    Corn

    |6| Storage

    Grow-outs

    Recordkeeping

    What goes on a label?

    Filing systems

    Garden Journal

    Joanne’s favorite (affordable) urban seed cleaning tools

    Have fun!

    An excerpt from The Secrets of Soil Building

    Soil Building

    How to Build Great Soil

    Take Care of Your Soil Critters

    Appendices

    Appendix 1: Urban Seed Saving Safe Harbors

    Appendix 2: Joanne’s favorite seed books and resources

    Appendix 3: Sources

    Appendix 4: Index of terminology

    About the author

    Easy seed saving

    Start with good seed.

    Grow one variety from each species. (Grow many species.)

    Meet your neighbors and know what they grow.

    Let your plants grow TALL and complete their lifecycles.

    Label everything - in duplicate or triplicate.

    Save the story with the seeds.

    |1|

    Urban seed saving

    There are many reasons that people save seeds.

    In the beginning, farmers saved seeds to create the harvest, to guarantee a food supply.

    You might save for flavor, to get great tasting tomatoes that you really like. You might save for diversity because you want to grow a lot of different tomatoes that look really cool.

    People save seeds from plants which do well under certain conditions - that tomato produced well in a hot summer. It put up with a drought. It set fruit even when it was really cold. Some people get into traditional plant breeding.

    You might get into seedsaving because it connects you to history, or to the country your ancestors came from. Lots of heirloom seeds come with a really cool story, and people keep the stories going.

    People save seeds for self-sufficiency or homesteading reasons. Some save seeds for budget reasons, to save money and get access to really good vegetables for free.

    Some people see seedsaving as a political statement, a way to reclaim power from the gigantic corporations which are slowly and steadily taking over the world’s food supply. Others realize that we must preserve our open-pollinated heirlooms outside of corporate patents.

    Localized seed saving is very important to long-term sustainability, especially as humanity copes with climate change. Each time you save seeds, each new generation in nature adapts slightly. As a seedsaver, you learn to save from your healthiest and best plants. So that means you’re - perhaps unconsciously - helping create a local strain which is adapted to your local circumstances.

    But a lot of people save seeds simply because it’s fun. It’s an activity you can share with your kids. It’s a natural extension of vegetable gardening, allowing the plants to complete their entire life cycle right there in front of you. Maybe it brings back memories of gardens you grew up in, or family stories about a great grandpa who grew awesome tomatoes.

    When you participate in seedsaving, you help keep precious old stories alive ... and you help create new ones.

    Cityscape seeds - my story

    I run Cityscape Seeds, a micro-sized seed company that grows on urban properties in Los Angeles. In 2014, Matt Van Diepen and I took a week-long seed course and realized how urgent humanity’s seed issues have become. We decided to take action, working with what we had.

    Because we live in the midst of the city and we were already connected with the urban agriculture scene, that’s where we started.

    The mission of Cityscape Seeds is to develop localized

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