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You are here: Home / Featured / New Garden Organic Seed Project

New Garden Organic Seed Project

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February 22, 2010 by admin Leave a Comment

The latest initiative from Garden organic, "Sowing New Seeds", funded by the Big Lottery Local Food Fund, will directly enable many more gardeners in the East and West Midlands to grow non-traditional crops, while also documenting how to grow them based on the experiences of the region’s diverse communities.

seedlings588x400 300x204 New Garden Organic Seed Project

Growing diverse varieties can be very rewarding

Garden Organic, which also runs the UK’s famous Heritage Seed Library dedicated to conserving the genetic diversity of vegetables, hopes that the project will unearth lots of interesting edible plants.

Sally Cunningham of the Sowing New Seeds project, said,

“The UK's population has changed dramatically in the past 40 years and so have our eating habits. People from all over the world have settled here and grown vegetables from their native homes such as callaloo, white maize, Hamburg parsley, dudi, black-eye beans and water chestnuts.

Many of these plants originate from Asia, Africa, Eastern Europe, Latin America or the Caribbean, and may eventually become adapted successfully to local conditions here in the UK.”

Share your seeds and experience
To get the project off the ground, Garden Organic is calling for anyone that grows exotic vegetables to come forward to share seeds and information.

The project’s aim is to give many more people in the East and West Midlands the chance to access and grow exotic seeds that have been grown under local conditions. Some of the varieties will also enter Garden Organic’s Heritage Seed Library, to be safeguarded and conserved for future generations.

The project will also produce vital fact sheets on how to grow the non-traditional crops, as well as events to demonstrate crop cultivation, seed saving, storage and cooking.

Garden Organic will also set up a brand new exotic crop garden at its flagship site, Ryton Gardens in Warwickshire.

To find out more and to get involved, visit the Garden Organic website where all contact information is availabe.

Sowing New Seeds also works with the following project partners:

  • Women’s Environmental Network (WEN),
  • Black Environment Network (BEN)
  • Federation of City Farms and Community Gardens,
  • National Society of Allotments and Leisure Gardeners,
  • Groundwork Midlands,
  • Soil Association CSA programme

You may also be interested in:

  • Seed search in Wales
  • Organisations
  • Suppliers of old varieties
  • New Name for NCCPG
  • Heritage Seeds

Filed Under: Featured Tagged With: Black Eye Beans, Crop Cultivation, Diverse Communities, Eating Habits, Edible Plants, Future Generations, Genetic Diversity, Hamburg Parsley, Heritage Seed Library, Latin America, Local Food, Maize, Organic Seed, Seed Project, Seeds Project, Traditional Crops, Uk Share, Vital Fact, Warwickshire, Water Chestnuts


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