[net.garden] seed shortage?

barbaral@tekig1.UUCP (09/23/83)

In a garden book I'm reading, the author seems to think there will
be a vegetable seed shortage in the future.  Anyone else heard this?
 
In a gardening magazine, someone wrote a letter saying that Avon's
Skin So Soft bath oil works great as a mosquito repellent.  Let me
know if you have try this.  It would be much more pleasant to put
on one's skin than the other bug repellents such as Cutter's or Off.

riddle@ut-sally.UUCP (09/26/83)

     As more of an admirer of the beautiful gardens of others than a
serious gardener myself, I almost hesitate to contribute to this newsgroup. 
I hope that this results in the comments of some of you who know more about 
the subject than I do.

     I haven't heard anything about a seed shortage per se, but I have
heard that there may soon be a real shortage in the diversity of seed
v a r i e t i e s  available both to gardeners and farmers.  The fear is
that the seed industry is controlled more and more by a few concerns
which are in turn owned by giants with a strong interest in the chemical
pesticide and fertilizer industries.  This means that they aren't inter-
ested in selling seeds suited to organic techniques.  In addition, more
and more varieties of fruits and vegetables are subject to something
akin to a copyright or a patent, generally in the hands of the big seed
companies, so that smaller operators can't propagate and sell the seeds
they are interested in.

     All of this is related to the more general question of biological
diversity in domestic plants.  Prior to modern horticultural techniques,
the seed stocks used by farmers in societies all over the world were
much more genetically diverse than they are today.  One of the goals of
a breeder of plants is to come up with pure strains carrying desirable
characteristics in the hope that every germinating seed will yield an
identically big, hardy, tasty plant.  Unfortunately, when this is combined
with monocrop farming where huge plots of land are planted with a single
crop, the result is an open invitation to a well-adapted parasite.
Therefore we have an even greater dependence on pesticides, herbicides,
and other chemicals designed to offset the side effects of the -icides.
The monotone nature of the resulting ecosystem means that the few wild
species of plants and animals which are suited to it reach plague-like
proportions while the bulk of the rest are snuffed out.  In addition, 
interest in a narrow range of domesticated seed stocks means the extinc-
tion of all the others: for a crop plant, of course, an end to culti-
vation means an end to its existence.  The issue is one of serious con-
cern to environmentalists and biologists who fear that we may come to
rue the day when we sacrificed the diversity of the plant world for a
short-term string of bumper crops.

                                    -- Prentiss Riddle
                                       {ihnp4,ut-ngp}!ut-sally!riddle
                                       riddle@ut-sally.UUCP

iccad@tekid.UUCP (IC Computer Aided Design) (09/28/83)

Seed shortage, hmmmmm... I make it a point to save seeds from the
previous year's crop.  I avoid planting sterile hybrid varieties.
I try to keep similar crops from miscegenating and producing
squnkumbers (difficult, if one also keeps bees.)  I have several
LARGE ammo cans full of seed packets and a sack of drying agent
(silica gel).  I try to save the BEST plants or fruits - ears
of corn, whatever - for seed.

Go ahead, Burpee et. al. - Start a seed shortage.  I'll salute you -
with my middle finger.

wm@tekchips.UUCP (Wm Leler) (10/26/83)

If you are interested in finding out sources for seeds and other
things, you might look at a new book called "The Seed Finder" put out
by Ten Speed Press.  It is a small, cheap (~$5) book that serves as a
guide to seed companies and their seeds; and there is not a single
hybrid listed!  The production and artwork was done by someone who
worked on the Whole Earth Catalog, and the book is very prettily done.

[Note:  I might be biased since I am related to one of the authors, but
if anyone gets this book and doesn't think it is so hot, let me know.
I'll pass any messages on.  Speaking of the authors, they are the same
people who brought you "How to grow more vegetables than you ever
imagined..."]

				Wm Leler
				wm.Tektronix@Rand-relay