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The Seeds of a New Economy
With the economy in shambles and banks closing across the country, a ray of light has appeared: a former bank in Petaluma, California has been reborn as a new heirloom seed bank. And the timing could not be better. From the White House garden to your garden, growth in the good food movement, coupled with a recession and concerns about food safety, has led to a resurgence in seed sales and revived interest in growing, canning and cooking your own. Imagine: out of the failing financial institutions languishing on the Main Streets of America, real economic stability and prosperity taking root and blooming. Empty banks across the country could be transformed into warehouses of independence and sustainability.
Less than an hour north of San Francisco, the aptly named Seed Bank is the brain child of Jeremiah Gettle, 28, founder of Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds based in Mansfield, Missouri. Gettle said he was searching for a historic site and fell in love with the building, the former Petaluma County National Bank. He felt Petaluma, located in Sonoma County, was the perfect spot. "This whole region is full of people growing, eating and supporting local food," Gettle said. "In California, half of our customers live within an hour's drive, and they're very excited that we're here."
Store Manager Paul Wallace said that the Seed Bank has been packed since it opened in early June with people from all over making the pilgrimage to marvel and buy rare seeds. (Weekenders, take note: for now, the Seed Bank is only opened Monday through Friday.) Bestsellers include carrots, squash, melon and beets (so there, President Obama). The store plans on selling local producers' artisan foods and crafts, including tools. Wallace said that the magnificent hall will also serve as a community center and gathering space.
The building been transformed by beautiful handmade wood shelves built to order by Amish crews brought in from the Ozarks. Row after row of neatly stacked packed heirloom varietals of lettuces, tomatoes, radishes, herbs stand at attention in their individual boxes. Light flooding in through the bank's high windows illuminates the brightly painted signs, which read, "Pure, natural non-GMO seeds and sundries" and "Save money invest in your garden." Along with an incredible array of seeds, the store stocks many books, magazines and a few gardening knives.
Homeschooled in the Ozarks, Gettle was raised in his family's gardens, where they grew dozens of melons and vegetables and saved seeds. His own first crops were scallop squash and yellow pear tomatoes. He started his first seed catalog in 1998, at the ripe age of 17 when he noticed that seeds starting disappearing from catalogs. He began by growing and collecting seeds during his journeys around the world. Today Baker Creek Heirloom Seeds offers 1275 unique heirloom seeds, all of which are open-pollinated-seeds that come back true each generation-and GMO-free. The company offers varieties from 70 countries produced by a network of 50 farmers. The catalog has grown from 550 subscribers to over 200,000 customers, making it one of the largest heirloom seed providers in the country. (Hear Gettle talk about Baker Creek in a post with a video on Civil Eats from earlier this year)
For now, Gettle is considering other cities in which to open seed banks. Top on the list in California are Santa Barbara, Vista or Oceanside. He has his sights on the Golden State because of its incredible growing potential and groundswell of interest in seeds. On the east coast, Gettle said he's considering Nashville, Tennessee and North Carolina. His first priority, however, is to find historic buildings. (Gettle's somewhat of a nostalgia buff and also runs Bakersville Pioneer Village. For a seemingly low-tech guy, he's even got a YouTube channel.)
"Seed saving is so important because it preserves the history and the flavor of these unique varieties," explained Gettle. "Many large corporations are taking control of the food supply, without caring how food is grown, or how the farmers who grow it are treated. We're interested in both and keeping heirloom varieties alive."
For more information on heirloom seeds and gardening:
http://www.seedsavers.org/
http://www.seedlibrary.org/
http://www.seedsofchange.com/
http://www.sandhillpreservation.com/
http://www.southernexposure.com/index.html
- Posted in

30 Comments so far
Show AllEmpty banks across the country could be transformed into warehouses of independence and sustainability.
The author is obviously a "terrorist" who needs to be scooped up off the streets and rendered to a secret prison in Eastern Europe where she will be reeducated through the use of enhanced interrogation techniques.
Obvious sedition here,insinuating that thousands of Heirlooms developed over generations are better crops than the few G.M.O.s that life science firms have 'engineered'.Next they will say people can save and reuse thier own seeds,and grow them without our herbicides pestcides and synthetic fertilisers .Hell next thing you know small farmers wont even need spring loans,and will probably turn into those Socialist C.S.A. farms! If untested cross species experments with novel proteins and allergens could possibly be harmfull why didn't the F.D.A. or D.O.A. say so?I see a big food disparagement lawsuit here if this thing catches on.Next they will be sayin' that Organic foods are higher in Vitamins and minerals content,or that Organic grass fed meat products and free range eggs and Raw milk are healthier and more humane and have a lower carbon footprint,using less water.
If these funky hippy farmer types don't calm down we will "Oprah Winfrey" thier sorry butts all the way to the poor house!( unconfirmed anonamous quote from former Monsanto executive now serving in government) peas in
:)
Just preserving heirloom seeds is not enough because the pollen from plants grown from GMO seeds will transfer the modifications to non-GMO plants. This feature is basically the heart of Monsanto's diabolical strategy to force everyone on earth who grows food to pay them royalties.
With our feckless courts supporting Monsanto's absurd claims, free farming is in danger.
We must rid the world of GMO seeds and the companies that produce them.
q
Anyone know what an Obama Courtier would know about farming except maybe applying lip stick to her pet pig?
100% correct--the facilities should be burned to the ground (especially the fields and green houses where these frankenfoods are being developed). Then the people behind this industry need some "education" on the need to find some better use for their talents and abilities.
Poet
quickstepper~
As a long time grower of open-pollinated (wind-borne pollen) corn, believe me, I know it! We are very fortunate on this farm, that we have distance and physical barriers (ie., trees) that offer us protection from GMO contamination.
thanks,
nedlud
Ned,
That's great news. I predict a growing market in anti-GMO measures and technology for conscientious farmers.
q
A few days ago I learned from a TV newscast that a couple that had amassed $ 60,000 credit card debts was allowed to settle for $ 16,000. Apparently this couple is one of hundreds of thousands if not millions of credit card holders who can never pay their debts.
I think that it is time to stop blaming the banks only and shine some light on these incredible, and in my opinion criminal, freeloaders.
Perhaps credit-card debtors should be forced to grow useful crops in their spare time to pay off their monstrous debts.
Only debit cards should be allowed in any "new economy".
Ignoring the fact that your post has virtually nothing to do with the article, I'll point out that, if the banks extend the credit, the folks who use it are not criminal. Swiping a credit card is not bank robbery.
Indebtedness is not a crime nor is the inability to repay it.
q
'criminal'? would you like debtors' prisons too?
Crowsnest July 22nd, 2009 1:05 pm
"Only debit cards should be allowed in any "new economy".
Crowsnest,
Sounds like a great plan. The problem is that the new economy is taking down wages while prices remain the same or increase - with the exception of real estate which continues to plunge. The architects of the new economy are making sure that the majority in this country will not only remain in debt, but work for wages which cannot possibly support a family.
Congratulations and best wishes to the Seed Bank!
What a spectacular idea! We have a lovely, historic, "Mechanics Hall" in Princeton, Massachusetts that needs a purpose...come take a look. We need a seed bank in New England as well.
Yes, yes, and yes to Jeremiah Gettle. You want to strike a blow against empire? Food sovereignty is step one and that begins with open-pollinated heirloom seeds capable of reproducing themselves for generation after generation.
I especially like the irony of using a former bank to house this store. Talk about turning swords into plowshares--how delicious to think of some marbled masoleum of Mamon being transformed into a secure warehouse for the survival of free peoples.
I also like the idea that Gettle and his associates are traveling around the world in an effort to preserve fast disappearing varieties of fruits and vegtables. That's also what the GMO and hybridization bastards are doing. May the Amish win that race!
Poet
I have grown my own open-pollinated varieties of seed corn since 1988. I raise cattle and horses, milk cows and treat them as the wonderful individuals that they are within the limits of my human capacity and what I've been allowed, financially, which is meager. We (our family) maintain a large garden with many heirloom varieties grown and seed saved. Again, this is something that we have done since the '80's.
Yet, Organic Valley--Family of Farms saw fit to harass and abuse me unmercifully in pursuit of corporate/shareholder gain. When I protested their violence against me, they re-doubled their agenda, in which they vilified me. In the end they terminated my contract. I am currently seeking legal recourse against them.
NOT EVEN ONCE DID THEY EVER OFFER ANY APOLOGY OR GIVE CONSIDERATION TO MY PROTESTS!
If you are buying Organic Valley products, you are purchasing from a malignant fraud.
Naomi Starkman~
Will you help me?
Dear Ned,Naomi may not have the funds .Your potential customers do.Ned have you tried starting a C.S.A. you could figure your expenses and what you want to offer and then add your salary and divide that by the smallest number of people you would need to support the farm.Then offer subscriptions to the people closest to you who express an interest to support your farm.You can offer discount to members who are willing to provide sweat equity.You never know ! peace bro
How about we keep our seeds and grow locally and stop allowing the UN to defend predatory criminal Big Agris like Monsanto ? It's tough enough reigning in that monster in St Louis what with a totally ignorant cornfed electorate but the UN only makes matters worse !
I suggested to my friends in Lexington KY a 'Fahrenheit 451' approach. each of us would save seed from a particular variety, ensuring purity (separating growing distance) and genetic diversity (growing a certain number of plants and collecting a lot of seeds) and then making those seeds available at a seed swap the following spring.
People like the idea. Now I just have to write it all down....
This is indeed good news! That's what I love about Common Dreams, good news. I've had enough bad news to last several lifetimes.
If I had my own media outlet, it would contain only good news stories like this. Let the MSM cover the bad news.
I'm still surprised that the bad news stories get the lions share of the comments. What's up with that? I mostly just skip the bad news and seek out stories like this.
I need inspiration, and these kinds of stories provide that beautifully. Thanks Naomi! However, I didn't get this sentence from the article: "Bestsellers include carrots, squash, melon and beets (so there, President Obama)."
As for seed saving, I'm now eating a bowl of rice (Cali organic basamati) with hempseed butter stirred in (Canada - should be homegrown), chopped up spinach and snap peas from my garden from seeds we produced in previous years. Healthy dinner!
Each year our own little seed bank grows. We always allow a few plants here and there in the garden to go to seed, then hang them to dry in a warm place out of the sun.
Come fall and winter we separate the seeds from the dried stalk and store them in labeled paper sacks or envelopes, then store in boxes in a cool, dry place.
Seeds are living embryos, and should be respected and treated as such. I think many people don't realize that seeds respirate, and need air, like any living being. So don't store in plastic bags. The best seed saving container I've found is a clay jar with a cork lid.
You are right about 'good news' there 'Moondoggy' , and it is yet one more example of the truth that---even on the 'darkest night' , a 'star shines' somewhere.....
This is another example one of those '12 decent Americans' I speak of often.
Good Luck------
Thanks for the encouragement, brother. I'm happy to see you are still contributing your wisdom to the Common Dreams community. We all have much to learn and to teach one another.
Good luck to you as well.
Heirlooms are open-pollinated varieties that have been selected for their ability to produce the same traits reliably from generation to generation.
In contrast, hybrid varieties are intentionally designed to not produce the same traits reliably from generation to generation, to force mass consumption of a proprietary product of which control may be bought and sold, accumulated and abused by the most "well-connected" and "ambitious" among us.
When you buy heirloom seeds, you should try to save seeds produced for planting next year. This allows you to create your own variety most suitable for your unique growing environment. Keep your experimental plots separate from your production plots. Your production plots provide a stable environment for reliable production year after year.
Heirloom perennials are even better. To select for your unique growing environment, plant a number of perennials and keep the best performing ones. Graft branches from the better producing ones onto ones that produce less but have strong roots or better locations.
NEIGHBORHOOD VEGETABLES. CO-OPERATIVE GARDENING IS THE WAY.
Here in Berkeley, Neighborhood Vegetables is sponsoring garden work parties. Each week we send out word for people to converge on someone's backyard garden and lend a hand with a shovel, a hoe, or some knowledge. About 550 people have signed up so far.
The next step is to decentralize to small neighborhoods so that people will be able to WALK to a work party every week. We'll see if that works.
We CAN build a new economy if we learn to co-operate for sustainability, and keep on experimenting with new/old social forms.
Regards,
Laurenceofberk@aol.com
I like you guys and your VICTORY GARDENS. In WWII, victory gardens in everybody's back yard freed up petro and manpower for the war.
Now you guys are doing it to save the planet (and symbiotically, yourselves at the same time by avoiding GMO poison at "Butt-Hole Foods" and the even more flagrant Chain Monopoly Stores.)
My Scarecrow's hat is off to you!
Cheers,
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
Why don't you join us "ThomasJefferson"? Then you too can be a "you guys" growing food to "save the planet".
"No occupation is so delightful to me as the culture of the earth and no culture comparable to that of the garden." -Thomas Jefferson
Yes, that's the spirit Moondoggy. I think I will take you up on it. Right now most of my food comes from my garden that my wife and my mother and father in-law till.
I have yet to get my fingers dirty in it. I think I'll start today!
Cheers,
TJ
"All tyranny needs to gain a foothold is for people of good conscience to remain silent." - Thomas Jefferson
Well get on it TJ! Whatcha waiting for? I've been "getting my fingers dirty" since I planted my first radish seeds when I was 4. It's so easy to be free!
As a person of good conscience, I cannot remain silent. Now plant something!
Nanoo
I've got some of Gettle's seed starts growing here. I had ordered a couple years back. One thing he could improve is planting instructions on seed packets, along with maturity days. I live to far north to be able to try much of the great variety he offers. His most recent catolog is stunning.
sierra7
This is an opportune time for all those McManshions' swimming pools to be filled in with good fertile soil and turned into good, productive gardens!!