Heres a couple new links for my friends to check out!
Carol Deppe (Author of The Resilient Gardner) finally has her personal site up) at www.caroldeppe.com
Meanwhile, I think you'll find it worthwhile to also check out our friend Joseph Lofthouses website where you can explore his plant breeding including an excellent page on our Astronomy Domine corn at garden.lofthouse.com
For seed CSA members, don't forget to place your order for seeds. For non members, check the post below to see whats available and how to order.
-Alan
Alfred Reed Bishop and Doris William Butler
The picture above is the very tap root of Bishop's Homegrown/Face Of The Earth Seed. My grandparents shortly after moving to Pekin Indiana from Greensburg KY in 1947 where they purchased the farm that is now Bishop's Homegrown. This picture was taken in Pekin in front of the old co-op next to the old railroad depot, neither of which exist today.
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Monday, November 29, 2010
Friday, November 19, 2010
Face Of The Earth: 2011 Seed Bazaar.
Jack White Tomato (photo courtesy of Terry Tassone of Tomato Addict Fame)
OSU Purple
Absinthe (Photo Courtesey of Terry Tassone)
OSU Purple
Absinthe (Photo Courtesey of Terry Tassone)
2011
seed bazaar
An introduction: Here is the completed 2011 Face of the Earth Seed Trade list. This is not the entirety of the seed collection or our work as Hip-Gnosis Seed Development over the preceding five years but instead a library of seed that we feel comfortable releasing as quality seed this season.
In the future we will be releasing many more collections than what is represented here; it is likely given the time constraints of conventional plant breeding and seed production by a single person that each year will see the release of 5-10 new collections. All seed collections represented below are public domain, unpatented, and open source. We also use no Genetically Modified Seeds in our breeding projects. We are comfortable that the seed we offer for trade is of good quality with acceptable germination.
You will notice that most of these collections are not pure varieties, they are various admixtures of new hybrids, segregating original crosses, and new open pollinated accessions, most of which we have breed on our own in recent history. We do not recommend these seeds to those who are concerned with high yield or with producing a large market crop; instead we offer these collections as an efficient and affordable (barter) source of genetics which would otherwise be cost prohibitive to the average gardener, farmer, or plant breeder to obtain.
Bulk Seed: Occasionally bulked seed is available of some of these projects send us an e-mail to inquire about obtaining bulk samples.
In Regards to acquiring seed: WE DO NOT CURRENTLY SELL SEED although that function will be explored thoroughly in coming seasons. WE ARE NOT A COMMERCIAL SEED COMPANY, instead we are agricultural explorers who are determined to put genetically diverse, bio-regionally adapted seed grexes into the hands of those who would make selections from them which would suit their wants and needs on an individual basis.
There are essentially three ways to obtain seed from our collection based on an idea our friend Joseph Lofthouse passed our direction. All three methods are based on tried and true methods of organizing an agricultural society through out human history; trade and barter.
1. In recent years we have began trading silver coins for seed to add to our collection. For each variety send two pre 1965 silver dimes per variety as well as $2.00 per order (not variety) to cover shipping. Silver dimes are readily available on e-bay, at pawn shops, and sometimes jewelry stores, you may even have some laying around in your coin collection. Other silver coins are also welcome as long as they are 90% silver, send us an e-mail explaining what you have and we can discuss the trade value.
2. Seed Trades - From time to time there are things we are looking for, at the moment we are mostly focused on perennial grains, brassica crops, corn, and fruit seeds, scions, or seedlings. We also are interested in poultry hatching eggs, most generally quail.
3. Cooperation - Public domain plant breeding requires the cooperation of other interested parties who will share genetics back in forth and help follow the progress of varieties and collections as they evolve. This would involve sending seed back to us every year for the sake of preserving as much genetic diversity as possible as well as for the sake of comparing and contrasting individual selections. In this method you will still need to cover shipping costs at $2.00 per order under 5 packs and $5.00 for orders over 5 packs unless the order is made up of small seed such as tomatoes, tobacco, or peppers.
For local orders visit us at our farm to discuss projects and trades or visit us at the Washington County Indiana Farmers Market located at the fairgrounds in Salem Indiana.
If you are a member of the seed CSA none of the above applies and you may order at your discretion.
Non specific requests: As mentioned above these collections don’t represent anywhere near the full scope of seed which we are producing for trade and instead just cover what we feel comfortable offering to the public at this time and seed which we had large quantities of. We do have many various other OP’s, Hybrids, and Populations on hand at any given time, if there is something which you are looking for but that is not listed here, please feel free to e-mail us and we will see what we have on hand. There is also the distinct possibility that more seed selections could be amended to this list later in the winter or early next spring if we add a variety we will republish the list on the web-site.
In regards to fruit seed and currently unlisted projects: Every year we have a number of events which interfere with the normal course of our agricultural pursuits, this season was no different with a drought unlike any I have ever witnessed in the Ohio Valley, and this brought production of some crops to their knees. The on farm turkey flock also taught us the importance of keeping certain crops such as alpine strawberries well protected from ravenous game birds, as such they are unfortunately not listed here this year as we barely got away with enough seed of our various crosses to maintain our new lines thereof, for members of the seed CSA if this was one of the varieties you had been interested in we will gladly credit you for a package for next season. We had planned on offering many other varieties this year as well but unfortunately the weather just did not cooperate, bad for seed production, but good for seed selection, we feel that even if it set us back a bit this year it just makes the seed selection process that much more reliable in terms of improved seed for the coming season.
Regarding treated seed: There are occasionally a small percentage of treated seeds present in our grexes as we make use of many commercial lines in breeding. We do not approve of this but in order to offer certain genetic traits this is currently the trade off we have to deal with. It shouldn’t have to be said but do not use these seeds for feed, oil, human consumption or any other absolutely idiotic perusal of death that you can dream of. WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR STUPIDITY.
The only guarantee we make on seed is that they will give acceptable germination (unless noted) and will grow a highly diverse and experimental crop of whatever type the seed is… We make no warranty otherwise.
Projects which we are pursuing and which will see release in the 2012 bazaar:
Cabbage Grex, Carrot Grex, Winter Cabbage Grex, Collard Grex, Mustard Grex, Perennial Rye, Perennial Wheat, Kazak apple seed, Raspberry grex, individual lines of soup and snap beans, Beet Grex, Chard Grex, Spinach Grex and many others.
Contact and ordering information:
homegrowngoodness.blogspot.com
alanbishop.proboards60.com
812-967-2073
Send orders on paper with required postage moneys as well as trade to:Alan Bishop
5604 S. State Rd. 60
Pekin IN 47165
To discuss trades or projects including silver coins:bishopshomegrown@gmail.com
Shipping Times: Since we do not employ seed packers and operate on a shoestring budget out of my own personal expense shipping isn’t quite industrialized but we strive to make sure that orders go out in a timely manner as they are received.
Tomatoes:
seed bazaar
An introduction: Here is the completed 2011 Face of the Earth Seed Trade list. This is not the entirety of the seed collection or our work as Hip-Gnosis Seed Development over the preceding five years but instead a library of seed that we feel comfortable releasing as quality seed this season.
In the future we will be releasing many more collections than what is represented here; it is likely given the time constraints of conventional plant breeding and seed production by a single person that each year will see the release of 5-10 new collections. All seed collections represented below are public domain, unpatented, and open source. We also use no Genetically Modified Seeds in our breeding projects. We are comfortable that the seed we offer for trade is of good quality with acceptable germination.
You will notice that most of these collections are not pure varieties, they are various admixtures of new hybrids, segregating original crosses, and new open pollinated accessions, most of which we have breed on our own in recent history. We do not recommend these seeds to those who are concerned with high yield or with producing a large market crop; instead we offer these collections as an efficient and affordable (barter) source of genetics which would otherwise be cost prohibitive to the average gardener, farmer, or plant breeder to obtain.
Bulk Seed: Occasionally bulked seed is available of some of these projects send us an e-mail to inquire about obtaining bulk samples.
In Regards to acquiring seed: WE DO NOT CURRENTLY SELL SEED although that function will be explored thoroughly in coming seasons. WE ARE NOT A COMMERCIAL SEED COMPANY, instead we are agricultural explorers who are determined to put genetically diverse, bio-regionally adapted seed grexes into the hands of those who would make selections from them which would suit their wants and needs on an individual basis.
There are essentially three ways to obtain seed from our collection based on an idea our friend Joseph Lofthouse passed our direction. All three methods are based on tried and true methods of organizing an agricultural society through out human history; trade and barter.
1. In recent years we have began trading silver coins for seed to add to our collection. For each variety send two pre 1965 silver dimes per variety as well as $2.00 per order (not variety) to cover shipping. Silver dimes are readily available on e-bay, at pawn shops, and sometimes jewelry stores, you may even have some laying around in your coin collection. Other silver coins are also welcome as long as they are 90% silver, send us an e-mail explaining what you have and we can discuss the trade value.
2. Seed Trades - From time to time there are things we are looking for, at the moment we are mostly focused on perennial grains, brassica crops, corn, and fruit seeds, scions, or seedlings. We also are interested in poultry hatching eggs, most generally quail.
3. Cooperation - Public domain plant breeding requires the cooperation of other interested parties who will share genetics back in forth and help follow the progress of varieties and collections as they evolve. This would involve sending seed back to us every year for the sake of preserving as much genetic diversity as possible as well as for the sake of comparing and contrasting individual selections. In this method you will still need to cover shipping costs at $2.00 per order under 5 packs and $5.00 for orders over 5 packs unless the order is made up of small seed such as tomatoes, tobacco, or peppers.
For local orders visit us at our farm to discuss projects and trades or visit us at the Washington County Indiana Farmers Market located at the fairgrounds in Salem Indiana.
If you are a member of the seed CSA none of the above applies and you may order at your discretion.
Non specific requests: As mentioned above these collections don’t represent anywhere near the full scope of seed which we are producing for trade and instead just cover what we feel comfortable offering to the public at this time and seed which we had large quantities of. We do have many various other OP’s, Hybrids, and Populations on hand at any given time, if there is something which you are looking for but that is not listed here, please feel free to e-mail us and we will see what we have on hand. There is also the distinct possibility that more seed selections could be amended to this list later in the winter or early next spring if we add a variety we will republish the list on the web-site.
In regards to fruit seed and currently unlisted projects: Every year we have a number of events which interfere with the normal course of our agricultural pursuits, this season was no different with a drought unlike any I have ever witnessed in the Ohio Valley, and this brought production of some crops to their knees. The on farm turkey flock also taught us the importance of keeping certain crops such as alpine strawberries well protected from ravenous game birds, as such they are unfortunately not listed here this year as we barely got away with enough seed of our various crosses to maintain our new lines thereof, for members of the seed CSA if this was one of the varieties you had been interested in we will gladly credit you for a package for next season. We had planned on offering many other varieties this year as well but unfortunately the weather just did not cooperate, bad for seed production, but good for seed selection, we feel that even if it set us back a bit this year it just makes the seed selection process that much more reliable in terms of improved seed for the coming season.
Regarding treated seed: There are occasionally a small percentage of treated seeds present in our grexes as we make use of many commercial lines in breeding. We do not approve of this but in order to offer certain genetic traits this is currently the trade off we have to deal with. It shouldn’t have to be said but do not use these seeds for feed, oil, human consumption or any other absolutely idiotic perusal of death that you can dream of. WE ARE NOT RESPONSIBLE FOR YOUR STUPIDITY.
The only guarantee we make on seed is that they will give acceptable germination (unless noted) and will grow a highly diverse and experimental crop of whatever type the seed is… We make no warranty otherwise.
Projects which we are pursuing and which will see release in the 2012 bazaar:
Cabbage Grex, Carrot Grex, Winter Cabbage Grex, Collard Grex, Mustard Grex, Perennial Rye, Perennial Wheat, Kazak apple seed, Raspberry grex, individual lines of soup and snap beans, Beet Grex, Chard Grex, Spinach Grex and many others.
Contact and ordering information:
homegrowngoodness.blogspot.com
alanbishop.proboards60.com
812-967-2073
Send orders on paper with required postage moneys as well as trade to:Alan Bishop
5604 S. State Rd. 60
Pekin IN 47165
To discuss trades or projects including silver coins:bishopshomegrown@gmail.com
Shipping Times: Since we do not employ seed packers and operate on a shoestring budget out of my own personal expense shipping isn’t quite industrialized but we strive to make sure that orders go out in a timely manner as they are received.
Tomatoes:
Mer De Noms Tomato - One of our very first and most noted breeding projects! 3-5 ounce red, juicy, globes. Highly esteemed by friends, family, and market customers as the perfect snacking or Saladette type tomato. Wonderfully sweet and slightly biting flavor. People have “fought” over these at home and market. Great for greenhouse culture or field culture, producing heavy trusses of reliable fruit. Quite a bit of disease resistance for an OP. Unfazed by late blight in 2009 and 2010.
Absinthe Tomato - Our unique green when ripe tomato is back for a second year. From a stabilized cross of Aunt Ruby’s German Green X Emerald Evergreen. Named after the famous drink favored by artists such as Picasso. Ripens to green with an amber blush. Drought tolerant reliable market or home garden cross. Spicy flavor which is great for BLT’s.
Jack White Tomato - Another of our unique new OP tomatoes. Jack white is a stabilized cross between White Beauty and White Tomesol, gaining the love of white tomato haters everywhere for it’s unique and delicious taste when compared to other white tomatoes. Named after Jack White, lead singer of the White Stripes band.
Phoenix Pink Tomato Landrace - Seeds from our favorite crosses, op’s, and homemade hybrids, saved together as a single variety over the past four years. The Pink Floyd Tomato we released several years ago is here as well. Lot’s of diversity, potato leaf and regular leaf. Tomatoes from 6 ounces up to two lbs or more. Trial this and select what you like, there are no named tomatoes in this mix other than Pink Floyd, these are literally all original unlabeled public domain works.
Sunspots Yellow/Orange Tomato Landrace - Seeds from our favorite crosses, op’s, and homemade hybrids, saved together as a single variety over the past four years. The Pac-Man Tomato we released several years ago is here as well. Lot’s of diversity, potato leaf and regular leaf. Tomatoes from 6 ounces up to two lbs or more. Trial this and select what you like, there are no named tomatoes in this mix other than Pac Man which was still segregating, these are literally all original unlabeled public domain works.
Olde 101 Red Tomato Mix - Obtained from one of the local Amish communities known for selling extra high quality canning and slicing tomatoes in bulk. 25 lbs for $5.00! When we spoke to them we were told these were maintained not as individual selections of seed but as a collection of diverse types. 8-16 ounces, mostly slicers and juicers but also some larger paste types similar to or the same as Amish paste! A new workhorse for us.
Paradigm red tomato Landrace - Seeds from our favorite crosses, op’s, and homemade hybrids, saved together as a single variety over the past four years. Lot’s of diversity, potato leaf and regular leaf. Tomatoes from 6 ounces up to two lbs or more. Trial this and select what you like, there are no named tomatoes in this mix as these are literally all original unlabeled public domain works. DTM 70-90
OSU Blue Tomato - A high anthocyanin tomato bred at Oregon Stat University by Jim Meyers. Anthocyanin develops in proportion to the fruits exposure to sunlight and is only skin deep. Some complain about the flavor but we have found them to actually be favorable as a salad tomato as well as a juicing tomato and have had a ton of luck with them as a market crop.
Roller coaster Cherry Tomato Landrace - Five years ago we collected an absolute ton of cherry tomato, currant tomato, cheesmani tomato, and Hirustrum tomato seeds of all colors of the rainbow, mixed them together and direct seeded them to a field which tends to stay saturated in wet weather allowing them to interbred and give rise to new strains of “half wild” tomatoes. Fortunately or unfortunately they self seed the same field every year, surprising us with their diverse forms and colors as well as shapes and tastes, these are some of the best selections from those feral tomatoes.
Lettuce:
Electric Head - A mix of our favorite cos and romaine types and a few loose leaf types, lots of purples and splotches. We grow this in a compost pile, let it seed, bury with fresh organic material, and let it come back spring and fall. Directly from our compost pile!
Melons:
Melons:
Absinthe Green Fleshed Musk Melon Mix - A mass cross of 9 distinct green fleshed muskmelon types. Great taste, good looks, better than orange fleshed melons. A big hit at the farmers market! A favorite breakfast item here at Bishop’s Homegrown! Selections from a mass cross of all commercially available green fleshed muskmelons and a few honey dews. Doesn’t set large fruit but masses of smaller ones. Expect off types including a few orange fleshed or honey dew types. Early season and quick cropping time make these great for short seasons as well as a fall planting.
Between the Sun and Moon Yellow/Orange/Red/White Watermelon Mass Cross - A mass cross of mostly yellow, orange, and white watermelons and an occasional high brix red icebox type. Too many varieties to name were planted in the field (close to 100). We saved seeds from the best in color, taste, and use! Check this out if you love watermelons! Select for those traits which fit your needs. We have consistently grown these in “weed patches” with better than expected results.
Red Watermelon Gene pool - From an absolutely huge mass cross of red fleshed melons 3 years ago, very diverse in type, days to maturity, disease resistance ext. Seed is a couple years old so we over packed to compensate for any shortcomings regarding germination, should be plenty here to develop something great for your uses out of.
Dionysus Melon Grex - Cantaloupes, Honey Dews, Tam Dews, Orange Fleshed Musk Melons grown in a mass cross situation for a couple of years. We ascribe to the plant orgy method of plant breeding from time to time, particularly in crops which due sub prime in our heavy clay soil anyhow. This is where the search for a truly great Ohio Valley Melon begins. Dionysus was the Greek god of wine and fertility and apparently a muse for non conventional plant breeders.
Sweet Corn:
Astronomy Domine Sweet Corn - A diverse gene pool from Hip-Gnosis Seed Development/Alan Reed Bishop. For those willing to give room and time to experimental plant breeding. Over 170 lines of open pollinated and hybrid (non-gmo) corn cultivars have been genetically folded together and selected in the direction of a mid season multi-color grex with great drought tolerance and a rainbow of color. Recent generations saw the inclusion of high yielding yellow hybrids, select away from yellow to maintain more diverse color in coming years. Lots of diversity and something here for everyone, survival food. Bulk too.
Beans:
Edamame Grex - Been thinking about growing edamame but don't know where to start? This one is for you. A grex of 20 plus varieties selected over 3 seasons for production from the ground up to the tip of the plant. Good for fixing nitrogen, better as a human food or forage crop. Select what you like. Incredibly drought tolerant and fairly short season at about 80-90 DTM. We didn’t plant ours until July and they did just fine!
Turnips:
6 Turnip Root Grex - An excellent public domain project by the wonderful Dr. Alan Kapuler! Several years back “Mushroom” decided to run a trial on several varieties of turnips, he selected the best six performers to take to the next generation and allowed them to interbreed. Original seed provided by Peace Seeds.
Radish:
Summer Radish Grex - I took Kapulers idea along with a ton of seed from Kent Ettlingers work and from the local seed store and ran with it. The results turned out interesting; we included some Daikon types for the sake of diversity and ended up with some nice new types. Very good sellers at market and wonderful when young and sliced into a salad.
Peppers:
PerfeKt pepper landrace - We have grown and crossed a number of Italian type sweet frying peppers, bell peppers, and other sweet peppers together over the years, most are now outcrossed and thoroughly integrated into this landrace which we maintain as one diverse variety. A utilitarian, everyday pepper mix, you may occasionally find one with heat, so approach with caution at harvest time.
Easter Everywhere Bell Pepper Mix - A collection of 9 or 10 bell peppers that we have made improved selections from over the past five years. Mature to multiple colors of the rainbow and contains genes for purple while green bells as well. Selection has been aimed towards productivity and large pepper size as well as ability to hold up well to stuffing and baking.
High Voltage Hot Pepper Landrace - We took our favorite heat stroke inducing peppers and folded them together into this unique grex of varieties. We don’t give much thought to the shape or color of the pepper, but more the taste and culinary uses of such. All of these are great for drying and use in Chiles, good in salsas as well, many are great for frying.
Okra:
Louisiana Red Cow horn Okra - Our neighbor Fred Bishop was kind enough to introduce us to this absolutely amazingly productive new to us cultivar of okra. The pods grow absolutely huge at more than a foot long often times and we have seen some approaching 20 inches. The pods stay amazingly tender even when large and the plants are extra productive. Doesn’t give most people the “okra itch” when you brush against the plant like traditional okras have a tendency to do. A new favorite and a Louisiana family heirloom that’s been adopted in the Ohio Valley by a different set of Bishop’s. Bulk Too
Green Gumbo Okra Mix - We have been collecting Okra for a few years now. It’s an obsession trying to find more diversity and better textures in one of our favorite crops. Here we present the 14 best types we have found thus far.
Squash:
Gold Standard Landrace Summer Squash - We do love summer squash, don’t get us wrong, but we also have issues with cucumber beetles and powdery mildew. Several yeas back Kent Ettlinger sent us seed for many diverse types of summer squash and we also purchased seeds for many others. We trialed them, tasted them, made selections and various crosses and started selecting from the mix which originally included zucchini types, crooknecks, scallops, and eight balls we have since pared it down to mostly crosses of zucchini and crooknecks which produce well throughout the season and don’t give us as many pest or disease issues. We have also had some luck in ferreting out a crookneck gene which allows the crookneck to get to a much larger size without developing a leathery skin or large inedible seeds, these we call gold standard, but since many off types still exist including the dominant zucchini we just maintain them as a whole for the time being. Bulk Too
Dry Farm Acorn Squash landrace - a mix of acorn varieties from our own collection as well as that of Long Island seed grown on the absolutely worst piece of soil on the farm over the past couple of years. Hard and heavy read clay is the norm here. This year we didn’t even add compost, instead we allowed the squash to show us what they had and forwent any irrigation as well, and the best of the best survived and produced a bumper crop of acorn squash from small to large in size in a diversity of color. From there we have chosen seed from the best looking, best tasting, and best storing of the survivors. Not the same as our ornamental edible mix which will be back next season. Bulk too
Cucurbrita Maxima Grex - A gene pool of mass crossed Maxima types, mostly of South American and African origin as well as some from the orient. Wonderfully flavored moist squash types in many shapes and sizes. Bulk too.
Hip-Gnosis Butternut - A simple butternut selection which we think is far better adapted to the Ohio Valley. A little more diverse that Waltham. A utility variety with great culinary qualities. Probably the one time we will ever pursue line breeding here on the farm as I just don’t find it all that exciting. A good selection none the less.
Cucumbers:
Hip-Gnosis Long White Slicing Cucumber - From a recurring mass cross of long white slicing cucumbers. Incredibly mild tasting cucumbers born on viney water seeking plants with incredible production. Still pretty diverse.
Bootleggers Best Seed (farm and feed crop)
Millet Mix - Selected from bags of scratch grain and bird seeds, includes several species of the grain commonly known as millet. Excellent high protein bird feed and forage crop, a favorite of game birds like quail, turkeys and guineas. Also makes a wonderful porridge.
El Diablo Tobacco Grex - A controversial plant for sure, tobacco provided us with the economic foundation we built our country upon and also wrecked the health of many great individuals. I obtained my formal agricultural training starting as a young boy working this very soil with my grandfather in his tobacco patch, without this formal introduction to the old ways and agriculture I wouldn‘t be doing what I do now. Tobacco use continues and there are many herbal uses for this sacred plant as well. When and if things ever go bad it wouldn’t be a bad idea to have this on hand for trade and barter. We have included several hundred original crosses here in this mix including burley types, shade leaf, Orinoco, Madole, Perique, Cavendish and others. Some of these genetics came directly from Castro’s Plantation. In the near future we plan on doing a feature regarding growing and curing tobacco at homegrowngoodness.blogspot.com
UK Tuxpeno Corn - Sent to us by our friend Jim Culpepper a couple years ago. Selectively bred by the University of Kentucky from a high yielding, high protein tropical lowland corn. Semi Flint. In trials here on the farm we have found the Turkeys prefer this variety as opposed to nearly all others. Grows close to 15 feet tall, prolific; two to three 6-8 inch ears per stalk, tight husk. Needs a bit of selection to breed out the tendency to produce a smut nose which protrudes occasionally through the end of the husk. Good breeding germ plasm. About 115-120 DTM. Bulk too.
Amanda Palmer Landrace corn - We folded a ton of old mid southern and corn belt dents as well as UK tuxpeno into this new landrace this past season including: bloody butcher, Daemon Morgans Kentucky Butcher, Reids Yellow Dent, Lancaster Surecrop, JF3, UK Tuxpeno, Mammoth White, Boone County White, Jellicorse Twin and several others. Multi color dent to semi flint in type. We selected for numerous beneficial traits including large stocks with a smaller “core” for fodder as well as the prolific trait, midsize to large ears, a multitude of kernel types, stalk strength and stand ability, ear drop, drought tolerance, low fertility tolerance, germination in cool wet soils. Most importantly however we selected for animal and human preference in the first generation seed, we individual trialed selected individual cobs as well as block selections for animal preference and palatability with our turkey flock and also tested this dent for culinary qualities as a fine corn bread. The meal is yellow with flecks of purple, red, and blue with a slightly naturally sweet flavor, it has become a huge hit in our household, makes a fine “sticky” type of grit as well. Something for everyone and my proudest breeding project yet even in only its first year. There are also “Kculli” genes floating around in this landrace and we have made a fine Chicha from select ears. I hear from friends in the know that it makes a fine moonshine as well. J 90 - 115 DTM. Select what works for you. Bulk too
Survivalism Rice Grex - Not a dry land rice, though we plan to offer that next year in the lineup, this instead is a gene pool we created a couple years back from material furnished to us by the USDA, includes some “blue rice” genes as well as some glutinous rice genes. We started and grew to fruition in a kiddy pool. Fairly long season, give it a jump by starting in a greenhouse. Contrary to popular belief rice doesn’t have to be grown in water. We used worm castings and garden loam as a starting base, dibbled the seeds into the mix, added water to about 2” over the soil level, after the rice emerged we slowly drained the water off and kept evenly moist throughout the summer. Does require a pretty long season and isn’t as heavily productive as I would like, but there is something here to work with if you are interested. 120 DTM
Wax corn grex - Our good friend and Chestnut breeder par excellence Castanea from Homegrown Goodness was kind enough to send us three separate 90 DTM selections of Waxy Corn from Lion Seeds. Two of these are hybrids and one is an OP, fortunately he sent more than enough seed to us to share them as a mixed accession giving you genetics to a rare genotype of corn not commonly seen outside of Asia. Waxy corn is well known in the orient as a wonderfully useful culinary corn which makes sticky flour, should be excellent for dessert dishes including a very “sticky” grit and more. Waxy corn is commonly used in the U.S. to make an adhesive; we find this a shame and would prefer to see it used more widely as human and animal food. In tests administered by the USDA in the 30’s and 40’s it was shown that wax corn was much more efficient as a feed grain that any of the other types of corn commonly used. All three selections are 90 DTM and their agronomic descriptions suggest that they should blend well into a new utility landrace making them excellent material for adventurous plant breeders. Which one of you wants to be the first to develop an independently bred waxy, human consumption grade, OP corn variety? 90 DTM
Saucerfull of Secrets sunflower mix - A wonderfully diverse mixture of sunflower types, we started with nearly 100 and selected for large and medium sized single heads with of multiple colors as well as multi-branched poly flowering types. In recent years we have selected seeds based not only on looks but on seed production and preference based on the poultry flock when feed as a scratch grain or in admixture with our home grown and ground feeds. Excellent crop for cut flowers, decorative hedges, or a fed grain. Bulk too.
Inanna Spring Wheat - We have a very limited amount of this very special wheat. A mixture of varieties rescued from Iraq post invasion. This is not cleaned seed it will consist of two or three awns and is offered here as a bonus only to those willing to put their heart and soul into preserving a tiny bit of the Iraqi agricultural heritage
Blackberries: A mixture of seed from 10 distinct thornless cultivars, lots of room to create a new thorn less blackberry including genes from runnering or dewberry type blackberries.
Alpine Strawberries: We had high hopes of introducing new alpine seeds this year, unfortunately a combination of drought, wild pigs, and the turkey flock dashed this from happening this season, we have foundation stock and will grow with greater protection next season, any one who wants seed can and will receive a credit on next seasons CSA.
List available in print by sending $2.00 to:
Alan Bishop
5604 S. State Rd. 60
Pekin IN 47165
List will also be printed in the Grande Bazzar spring 2011.
Peppers:
PerfeKt pepper landrace - We have grown and crossed a number of Italian type sweet frying peppers, bell peppers, and other sweet peppers together over the years, most are now outcrossed and thoroughly integrated into this landrace which we maintain as one diverse variety. A utilitarian, everyday pepper mix, you may occasionally find one with heat, so approach with caution at harvest time.
Easter Everywhere Bell Pepper Mix - A collection of 9 or 10 bell peppers that we have made improved selections from over the past five years. Mature to multiple colors of the rainbow and contains genes for purple while green bells as well. Selection has been aimed towards productivity and large pepper size as well as ability to hold up well to stuffing and baking.
High Voltage Hot Pepper Landrace - We took our favorite heat stroke inducing peppers and folded them together into this unique grex of varieties. We don’t give much thought to the shape or color of the pepper, but more the taste and culinary uses of such. All of these are great for drying and use in Chiles, good in salsas as well, many are great for frying.
Okra:
Louisiana Red Cow horn Okra - Our neighbor Fred Bishop was kind enough to introduce us to this absolutely amazingly productive new to us cultivar of okra. The pods grow absolutely huge at more than a foot long often times and we have seen some approaching 20 inches. The pods stay amazingly tender even when large and the plants are extra productive. Doesn’t give most people the “okra itch” when you brush against the plant like traditional okras have a tendency to do. A new favorite and a Louisiana family heirloom that’s been adopted in the Ohio Valley by a different set of Bishop’s. Bulk Too
Green Gumbo Okra Mix - We have been collecting Okra for a few years now. It’s an obsession trying to find more diversity and better textures in one of our favorite crops. Here we present the 14 best types we have found thus far.
Squash:
Gold Standard Landrace Summer Squash - We do love summer squash, don’t get us wrong, but we also have issues with cucumber beetles and powdery mildew. Several yeas back Kent Ettlinger sent us seed for many diverse types of summer squash and we also purchased seeds for many others. We trialed them, tasted them, made selections and various crosses and started selecting from the mix which originally included zucchini types, crooknecks, scallops, and eight balls we have since pared it down to mostly crosses of zucchini and crooknecks which produce well throughout the season and don’t give us as many pest or disease issues. We have also had some luck in ferreting out a crookneck gene which allows the crookneck to get to a much larger size without developing a leathery skin or large inedible seeds, these we call gold standard, but since many off types still exist including the dominant zucchini we just maintain them as a whole for the time being. Bulk Too
Dry Farm Acorn Squash landrace - a mix of acorn varieties from our own collection as well as that of Long Island seed grown on the absolutely worst piece of soil on the farm over the past couple of years. Hard and heavy read clay is the norm here. This year we didn’t even add compost, instead we allowed the squash to show us what they had and forwent any irrigation as well, and the best of the best survived and produced a bumper crop of acorn squash from small to large in size in a diversity of color. From there we have chosen seed from the best looking, best tasting, and best storing of the survivors. Not the same as our ornamental edible mix which will be back next season. Bulk too
Cucurbrita Maxima Grex - A gene pool of mass crossed Maxima types, mostly of South American and African origin as well as some from the orient. Wonderfully flavored moist squash types in many shapes and sizes. Bulk too.
Hip-Gnosis Butternut - A simple butternut selection which we think is far better adapted to the Ohio Valley. A little more diverse that Waltham. A utility variety with great culinary qualities. Probably the one time we will ever pursue line breeding here on the farm as I just don’t find it all that exciting. A good selection none the less.
Cucumbers:
Hip-Gnosis Long White Slicing Cucumber - From a recurring mass cross of long white slicing cucumbers. Incredibly mild tasting cucumbers born on viney water seeking plants with incredible production. Still pretty diverse.
Bootleggers Best Seed (farm and feed crop)
Millet Mix - Selected from bags of scratch grain and bird seeds, includes several species of the grain commonly known as millet. Excellent high protein bird feed and forage crop, a favorite of game birds like quail, turkeys and guineas. Also makes a wonderful porridge.
El Diablo Tobacco Grex - A controversial plant for sure, tobacco provided us with the economic foundation we built our country upon and also wrecked the health of many great individuals. I obtained my formal agricultural training starting as a young boy working this very soil with my grandfather in his tobacco patch, without this formal introduction to the old ways and agriculture I wouldn‘t be doing what I do now. Tobacco use continues and there are many herbal uses for this sacred plant as well. When and if things ever go bad it wouldn’t be a bad idea to have this on hand for trade and barter. We have included several hundred original crosses here in this mix including burley types, shade leaf, Orinoco, Madole, Perique, Cavendish and others. Some of these genetics came directly from Castro’s Plantation. In the near future we plan on doing a feature regarding growing and curing tobacco at homegrowngoodness.blogspot.com
UK Tuxpeno Corn - Sent to us by our friend Jim Culpepper a couple years ago. Selectively bred by the University of Kentucky from a high yielding, high protein tropical lowland corn. Semi Flint. In trials here on the farm we have found the Turkeys prefer this variety as opposed to nearly all others. Grows close to 15 feet tall, prolific; two to three 6-8 inch ears per stalk, tight husk. Needs a bit of selection to breed out the tendency to produce a smut nose which protrudes occasionally through the end of the husk. Good breeding germ plasm. About 115-120 DTM. Bulk too.
Amanda Palmer Landrace corn - We folded a ton of old mid southern and corn belt dents as well as UK tuxpeno into this new landrace this past season including: bloody butcher, Daemon Morgans Kentucky Butcher, Reids Yellow Dent, Lancaster Surecrop, JF3, UK Tuxpeno, Mammoth White, Boone County White, Jellicorse Twin and several others. Multi color dent to semi flint in type. We selected for numerous beneficial traits including large stocks with a smaller “core” for fodder as well as the prolific trait, midsize to large ears, a multitude of kernel types, stalk strength and stand ability, ear drop, drought tolerance, low fertility tolerance, germination in cool wet soils. Most importantly however we selected for animal and human preference in the first generation seed, we individual trialed selected individual cobs as well as block selections for animal preference and palatability with our turkey flock and also tested this dent for culinary qualities as a fine corn bread. The meal is yellow with flecks of purple, red, and blue with a slightly naturally sweet flavor, it has become a huge hit in our household, makes a fine “sticky” type of grit as well. Something for everyone and my proudest breeding project yet even in only its first year. There are also “Kculli” genes floating around in this landrace and we have made a fine Chicha from select ears. I hear from friends in the know that it makes a fine moonshine as well. J 90 - 115 DTM. Select what works for you. Bulk too
Survivalism Rice Grex - Not a dry land rice, though we plan to offer that next year in the lineup, this instead is a gene pool we created a couple years back from material furnished to us by the USDA, includes some “blue rice” genes as well as some glutinous rice genes. We started and grew to fruition in a kiddy pool. Fairly long season, give it a jump by starting in a greenhouse. Contrary to popular belief rice doesn’t have to be grown in water. We used worm castings and garden loam as a starting base, dibbled the seeds into the mix, added water to about 2” over the soil level, after the rice emerged we slowly drained the water off and kept evenly moist throughout the summer. Does require a pretty long season and isn’t as heavily productive as I would like, but there is something here to work with if you are interested. 120 DTM
Wax corn grex - Our good friend and Chestnut breeder par excellence Castanea from Homegrown Goodness was kind enough to send us three separate 90 DTM selections of Waxy Corn from Lion Seeds. Two of these are hybrids and one is an OP, fortunately he sent more than enough seed to us to share them as a mixed accession giving you genetics to a rare genotype of corn not commonly seen outside of Asia. Waxy corn is well known in the orient as a wonderfully useful culinary corn which makes sticky flour, should be excellent for dessert dishes including a very “sticky” grit and more. Waxy corn is commonly used in the U.S. to make an adhesive; we find this a shame and would prefer to see it used more widely as human and animal food. In tests administered by the USDA in the 30’s and 40’s it was shown that wax corn was much more efficient as a feed grain that any of the other types of corn commonly used. All three selections are 90 DTM and their agronomic descriptions suggest that they should blend well into a new utility landrace making them excellent material for adventurous plant breeders. Which one of you wants to be the first to develop an independently bred waxy, human consumption grade, OP corn variety? 90 DTM
Saucerfull of Secrets sunflower mix - A wonderfully diverse mixture of sunflower types, we started with nearly 100 and selected for large and medium sized single heads with of multiple colors as well as multi-branched poly flowering types. In recent years we have selected seeds based not only on looks but on seed production and preference based on the poultry flock when feed as a scratch grain or in admixture with our home grown and ground feeds. Excellent crop for cut flowers, decorative hedges, or a fed grain. Bulk too.
Inanna Spring Wheat - We have a very limited amount of this very special wheat. A mixture of varieties rescued from Iraq post invasion. This is not cleaned seed it will consist of two or three awns and is offered here as a bonus only to those willing to put their heart and soul into preserving a tiny bit of the Iraqi agricultural heritage
Blackberries: A mixture of seed from 10 distinct thornless cultivars, lots of room to create a new thorn less blackberry including genes from runnering or dewberry type blackberries.
Alpine Strawberries: We had high hopes of introducing new alpine seeds this year, unfortunately a combination of drought, wild pigs, and the turkey flock dashed this from happening this season, we have foundation stock and will grow with greater protection next season, any one who wants seed can and will receive a credit on next seasons CSA.
List available in print by sending $2.00 to:
Alan Bishop
5604 S. State Rd. 60
Pekin IN 47165
List will also be printed in the Grande Bazzar spring 2011.
Labels:
2011 Seed Bazzar.,
Face Of The Earth Seed
Tuesday, November 16, 2010
Peasant barn: coming along.
Turkey shed
"Barn Stand"
Breeding Pen
Metal will be covered with paint.
Breeding Pen
Metal will be covered with paint.
We got all the metal work done on the outside of the barn and most of the cross bracing is now in place. There is a partial second story to one side of the barn above what used to be a corn crib and will now be breeding cages for controlled turkey and guinea crosses and brooding boxes for turkey hens.
Found a place where there once was a window at the apex of the back of the barn facing the neighbors property, we always have coyote problems from this area and there is a large population of red squirrel in the trees in that area along with a nice deer trail cutting accross it so I had to make a platform under the window as a "barn stand" lol. Way to wet to work today as the roof is still leaky, but it won't take long now.
I hope to have it done by December so I can begin doing some "dofer blacksmithing". All in all about $100. investment for my "utility" barn, minus of course the tetanus shot from stepping on a rusty 16 penny nail a couple weeks ago. Ignore the mess in the pictures.
Coturnix Quail Aviary.
With the (re) construction of the "peasant barn" nearly finished I am left with two turkey coops (previously greenhouses) to use for other endeavors such as rabbits and quail. The coturnix have already been moved to the smaller Rion coop (greenhouse) which has been outfited with a heat lamp and shop light set with a time to allow for 17 hours of light a day in order to induce breeding and laying in order to get a bumper crop of meat birds for this winter. The quail seem quite comfy and there is far less fighting and pecking going on in here. Ocassionally I catch 1 male and 2 or 3 females in a "covey" claiming their territory. I figure there is enough room here for probably 125-150 birds.
Once the peasant barn is finished and all the breeding cages and turkey shed constructed therin I'll be adding Georgia Giant quail to the resume as well. We also just put in an order for another 96 mixed coturnix quail hatching eggs. Expanding upon these little birds should be fun and profitable.
Some other feed making resources
Morrisons Feed And Feeding
Chicken Feed
Greener Pastures Farm
Gamebird Feed
Rabbit Talk
Homesteading Today
These are all good starting points, I may at some point upload my collection of local feed mill recipies.
Chicken Feed
Greener Pastures Farm
Gamebird Feed
Rabbit Talk
Homesteading Today
These are all good starting points, I may at some point upload my collection of local feed mill recipies.
Making efficient use of abundant local resources.
I planned on adding a few pics to this post, but due to the fact that were getting our first real deluge since late July here in Southern Indiana I am entirely to lazy (and warm, thank you wood heat!) to bother going out and getting soaked to take some pics at the moment.
One of the many things that allows me to continue running this farm on less than a shoestring budget is my ability to trade and barter as well as my uncanny knack for "lucking out" and coming accross discarded things which people no longer need or want to deal with. I am thankful for all of it.
A recent example (pair this with my Gamebird Feed Ration recipie below) was the sudden thought that crossed my mind while picking up a "Jack O' Lantern" with Kim for Halloween (we don't grown jack o' lanterns here). We picked ours up the weekend of Halloween from a local farmers market vendor who we know fairly well, business seemed slow at their stand so I took note of the hundreds of pumkins setting around thinking; "turkeys love c-pepos and they don't need to be cooked to be palatable....hmmmm."
Needless to say, the following week I came home with a loaded down truck full of pumpkins that I placed in the corn crib for short term storage as I knew they would be fed out quickly and also don't store well. To the farmers who gave us the pumpkins sustainable agriculture is a term that applies to other farms such as mine, they don't raise any animals and they don't make compost so the pumpkins to them were just the source of future cleanup, to us though they represented a valuable source of food and nutrition (as well as a wormer via the seeds) for our turkey flock. Everyone gets something from the deal so to speak and I put what would have been an absolute waste of soil fertility and food to good use here on the farm. Of course as soon as the turkeys are "finished" with them they will find their way via turkey manure to the corn crop to feed the turkeys next season.
Another fantastic example (a bit of a "follow up" to the post about trading nursery stock for quail and turkeys) involves the current peasant barn project. I was running short on metal and lumber and in need of resources quickly to finish the infrastructure of the building prior to the setting in of inclimate weather. A fellow friend of mine (and resource scavenger) just happened to be in need of some turkeys hens and toms and also just happened to have nearly the exact amount of metal and lumber I was looking for on hand, all was second hand material but in good shape. I had extra toms and hens that weren't needed as they didn't match my turkey breeding program requirements and a quick trade was facilitated. We both came out on top.
If you've read this blog long enough, you know these are fairly common occurences with me. Resources are out there if you are looking for them and don't ever forget about the power of the "gray" market that is craiglist or the "black market" that is under the table trade.
:)
One of the many things that allows me to continue running this farm on less than a shoestring budget is my ability to trade and barter as well as my uncanny knack for "lucking out" and coming accross discarded things which people no longer need or want to deal with. I am thankful for all of it.
A recent example (pair this with my Gamebird Feed Ration recipie below) was the sudden thought that crossed my mind while picking up a "Jack O' Lantern" with Kim for Halloween (we don't grown jack o' lanterns here). We picked ours up the weekend of Halloween from a local farmers market vendor who we know fairly well, business seemed slow at their stand so I took note of the hundreds of pumkins setting around thinking; "turkeys love c-pepos and they don't need to be cooked to be palatable....hmmmm."
Needless to say, the following week I came home with a loaded down truck full of pumpkins that I placed in the corn crib for short term storage as I knew they would be fed out quickly and also don't store well. To the farmers who gave us the pumpkins sustainable agriculture is a term that applies to other farms such as mine, they don't raise any animals and they don't make compost so the pumpkins to them were just the source of future cleanup, to us though they represented a valuable source of food and nutrition (as well as a wormer via the seeds) for our turkey flock. Everyone gets something from the deal so to speak and I put what would have been an absolute waste of soil fertility and food to good use here on the farm. Of course as soon as the turkeys are "finished" with them they will find their way via turkey manure to the corn crop to feed the turkeys next season.
Another fantastic example (a bit of a "follow up" to the post about trading nursery stock for quail and turkeys) involves the current peasant barn project. I was running short on metal and lumber and in need of resources quickly to finish the infrastructure of the building prior to the setting in of inclimate weather. A fellow friend of mine (and resource scavenger) just happened to be in need of some turkeys hens and toms and also just happened to have nearly the exact amount of metal and lumber I was looking for on hand, all was second hand material but in good shape. I had extra toms and hens that weren't needed as they didn't match my turkey breeding program requirements and a quick trade was facilitated. We both came out on top.
If you've read this blog long enough, you know these are fairly common occurences with me. Resources are out there if you are looking for them and don't ever forget about the power of the "gray" market that is craiglist or the "black market" that is under the table trade.
:)
Really.....about fucking time.
Apparently the Justice Department has now ruled that naturally occuring genes are not patentable.
I'll believe that when I see them enforce it. And since when were we actually Synthesizing completely new genes to work with in the first place? (I know about Craig Venter)
It still doesn't change the fact that no one owns life. It's also important to note here that a PVP or copyright on any seed only stops "honest" people from stealing/liberating (depending on your view) those genes.
I'll believe that when I see them enforce it. And since when were we actually Synthesizing completely new genes to work with in the first place? (I know about Craig Venter)
It still doesn't change the fact that no one owns life. It's also important to note here that a PVP or copyright on any seed only stops "honest" people from stealing/liberating (depending on your view) those genes.
Experimenting with feeds, the first recipie of my own:
Following the conversation on multiple message boards lately and being a strict observer of the commodities market I can't help but have noticed the talk turn to "inflation". It's not suprising, some of it have been screaming it for quite a while now, what is suprising are the number of people actually suprised by it and totally still uprepared for the shit storm to come. Equally suprising is the number of people who a year ago thought I was a nut job who have now been "illuminated" so to speak.
Regardless, that's what this blog exists for as well as what the Homegrown Goodness message board exists for (in coming months it will come to reflect as such much more clearly than it currently does). Every bit of this research, while useful to upstart farmers and plant breeders, functions more as a source of information and inspiration to those preparing.
Every since I started raising poultry a few years back I've been an avid "feed recipie" collector, I copy and paste them like mad from all over the net and have friends at local feed mills bootleg me copies of their recipies for research purposes.
What you come to learn rather quickly is that the majority of all feeds are "complete diets" designed for completely confined animals with little thought to the animals which are allowed range and don't need a "doctored" feed to "baby" them through life. You also quickly learn that a lot of these feeds are unsustainable or nearly impossible to mill on your own property, particularly if you plan to grow the ingredients yourself.
Roasted soy is the hardest of these to produce yourself, fortunately it's also not necessary once you figure out the benefits available from other sources of protein provided both by range in the "fat of the year" and by table scraps or other grains (including high protein corn, wheat, and oats in the winter).
I experimented a hell of a lot with a utility mix for turkeys, guineas, bantams, and now quail and have come to the most sustainable mix I could find that still manages to get the job done.
As such, here it is, the simplest recipie I have ever seen for a high protein "utility" feed:
Bishop's Homegrown Sustainable Gamebird Feed:
Bishop's Homegrown (sustainable) Gamebird Ration
Corn
Wheat (substitute millet)
Oats (optional)
Sunfl. seed
...Sprouted oats (sprouted grain of any type works)
Oyster shell (lime for quail) free choice (this isn't locally sustainable but feeding eggshell back to the birds also works on a limited basis. Lime in Indiana however is fairly sustainable (dolomite lime only!)
Grit (particularly for confined birds like quail.
PARTS
2
3
2
1
5 (I actually use no where near five parts sunflower seed due to space limitations with growing and storing sunflowers, experiment and you'll find what works)
Next comes rabbit feed...give me three more years, but I'm betting grass and legume paired with garden vegetable scraps will get us close. Perhaps not as efficent as pellets, but workable.
Regardless, that's what this blog exists for as well as what the Homegrown Goodness message board exists for (in coming months it will come to reflect as such much more clearly than it currently does). Every bit of this research, while useful to upstart farmers and plant breeders, functions more as a source of information and inspiration to those preparing.
Every since I started raising poultry a few years back I've been an avid "feed recipie" collector, I copy and paste them like mad from all over the net and have friends at local feed mills bootleg me copies of their recipies for research purposes.
What you come to learn rather quickly is that the majority of all feeds are "complete diets" designed for completely confined animals with little thought to the animals which are allowed range and don't need a "doctored" feed to "baby" them through life. You also quickly learn that a lot of these feeds are unsustainable or nearly impossible to mill on your own property, particularly if you plan to grow the ingredients yourself.
Roasted soy is the hardest of these to produce yourself, fortunately it's also not necessary once you figure out the benefits available from other sources of protein provided both by range in the "fat of the year" and by table scraps or other grains (including high protein corn, wheat, and oats in the winter).
I experimented a hell of a lot with a utility mix for turkeys, guineas, bantams, and now quail and have come to the most sustainable mix I could find that still manages to get the job done.
As such, here it is, the simplest recipie I have ever seen for a high protein "utility" feed:
Bishop's Homegrown Sustainable Gamebird Feed:
Bishop's Homegrown (sustainable) Gamebird Ration
Corn
Wheat (substitute millet)
Oats (optional)
Sunfl. seed
...Sprouted oats (sprouted grain of any type works)
Oyster shell (lime for quail) free choice (this isn't locally sustainable but feeding eggshell back to the birds also works on a limited basis. Lime in Indiana however is fairly sustainable (dolomite lime only!)
Grit (particularly for confined birds like quail.
PARTS
2
3
2
1
5 (I actually use no where near five parts sunflower seed due to space limitations with growing and storing sunflowers, experiment and you'll find what works)
Next comes rabbit feed...give me three more years, but I'm betting grass and legume paired with garden vegetable scraps will get us close. Perhaps not as efficent as pellets, but workable.
A must watch...
....for those interested in fighting against the powers that be and the GMO onslaught contaminating our fields, food supply and seed. An interview with Frank Morton of Wild Garden Seeds (check them out, lots of good original breeder seed.)
Monday, November 8, 2010
Seed CSA and blog update!
Hey guys, writing the seed list/cataloug descriptions and packing seeds right now, should be up in the week or so, waiting on getting some seed from a grower as well. Good stuff this year and I hope you guys are as excited about it as I am.
blog updates coming soon as well. November used to be a dead month for us, with the addition of animals and seeds that's no longer the case. :)
Your Friend,
alan
blog updates coming soon as well. November used to be a dead month for us, with the addition of animals and seeds that's no longer the case. :)
Your Friend,
alan
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