|
|
The Joy of Heirloom Gardening
by Jim Veteto
|
As I look around the garden here at the Arthur
Morgan School on a beautiful May morning, the variety of color
and leaf structure in the early season section of our garden gives
me great satisfaction. In one row, the intense solid red leaves
of some plants alternating with the green and red paint-splash
colored plants of the Hyper Red Rumple lettuce, the Cherry Belle
Radishes and the beautiful green and red Bruce D’Hiver lettuce
make a nice trio. In another bed four varieties of lettuce are
sparkling in the early morning sun: the deep red and green ruffled
leaves of Pablo Batavian, the more transparent greenish red of
Majestic Red lettuce, the brilliant almost-new green of the Black
Seeded Simpson lettuce and the red oakish leaves of Red Salad
Bowl. They are all modestly interplanted with Red Onions to help
deter pests. Another nearby bed contains White Russian Kale, Nero
di Tuscana Kale, Prize Pac Choi, Takinoshi Daikon, Cherokee Blue
Mustard Greens, and White Onions. These small beds contain just
a few of the 125 varieties of heirloom vegetables that we will
grow here this summer.
What exactly is an heirloom vegetable, flower or herb? There are
many definitions and discussions on the subject in heirloom gardening
circles. This is the definition we have come up with in the Arthur
Morgan School garden program: Heirloom vegetable, flower and herb
seed are open pollinated seeds that have been passed down in a
family, culture, or community for many generations. A seed that
has a fifty year old or older history can be considered an heirloom.
There are many good reasons to incorporate more heirloom varieties
into your gardening. They are often better adapted to local conditions
than modern hybrid or genetically engineered seeds. In other words,
they enjoy the qualities of drought, disease and insect resistance
and adaptations to specific soil conditions. Heirloom varieties
are often viable for longer periods of the growing season than
modern hybrids, which are bred to be harvested all at one time
for the marketing convenience of industrial farmers. This has
the advantage of supplying home gardeners or CSA’s (Community
Supported Agriculture) with a steady stream of vegetables for
longer periods of the growing season. For educators, parents or
information buffs, heirloom varieties offer immense educational
value.
You can learn all sorts of things about history, culture, science
and social studies by studying heirloom varieties and their seed
legacies. An extremely important reason that home gardeners need
to grow and preserve heirloom varieties is that 92% of our American
heirloom vegetable varieties have been lost in the last century.
(For more information about the loss of agricultural biodiversity
see my article in the Dec-Jan 2002 issue of NLJ). By growing heirloom
plants, you are entering a living tradition of seed savers. This
tradition can help strengthen the bonds between older and younger
generations, and seed swapping can create community-building opportunities.
Another important reason is… for the taste of it! If you
grow a wider selection of vegetables, you will discover that you
have more options to choose from to satisfy your own particular
taste buds! This variety can also provide you with a wider selection
of beautiful colors in the garden and a more complete nutritional
content than if you just rely on a few modern commercial varieties.
Now that I have shared a number of reasons for growing heirloom
seeds, I would like to share a personal story about one of my
seed swapping and saving experiences. In 1997, I attended the
Indigenous Environmental Network Conference at the Fort Belknap
Indian Reservation out in Montana. There were two Sac and Fox
Nation gentlemen there from Oklahoma who worked for a Native Agriculture
project called the Thakiwa Foundation. They were giving away seeds
for three different vegetables including Coushaw Squash, Cherokee
White Flour Corn, and Indian Pumpkin. They told me that all three
sets of seeds had been brought across on the infamous “Trail
of Tears” from the Southeast (including our region) in the
winter of 1838-9. Since that time, they had been grown by native
people in Oklahoma for generations. When I told them that I was
from the Southeast, they were pleased and thought it appropriate
that I would bring the seeds back home and grow them in their
native place. An interesting thing that I did not discuss with
them was that my father’s great, great, great grandparents
had been forced to travel on the Trail of Tears in 1838-9 as well.
Now when I grow Cherokee White Flour Corn, Coushaw Squash, and
Cherokee Trail of Tears Bean (which I located from another seed
saver) in the “Three Sisters” native guild section
of our garden, I not only get beautiful plants and great food
but I feel like I’m preserving a bit of cultural history
as well as maintaining a link to my own families past.
The possibilities for this kind of meaningful gardening connection
are numerous. I have a friend who grows Italian heirloom vegetables
as a link to his Italian ancestry. It is well known that many
Amish and Native communities maintain seeds that have histories
that stretch back hundreds or thousands of years. Some people
engage in “kinship gardening” that grows plants in
the same botanical family near each other so that people can observe
the diversity and the similarities between them. The Joy of Heirloom
gardening is contagious and it all starts with the interest and
desire to find, grow and save ancient seed.
Jim Veteto is the gardener at the
Arthur Morgan School, an alternative boarding school for grades
7-9 located in Celo, NC that features an heirloom garden with
125 different vegetable varieties. Contact this writer:writer@newlifejournal.com
Back
to New Life Journal..
|
| |
| |
| |
| |
| |
Business Listings
Your guide to health practitioners
and sustainable businesses in Asheville, NC, Atlanta and Athens,GA, Greenville,
SC and the Southeast
NATURAL HEALING
massage, acupuncturists, energy medicine, herbalists, yoga centers,
natural medicine, healers, alternative therapies, healing workshops
NATURAL FOODS
health food stores, restaurants, nutritionists, whole foods chefs,
natural foods lectures & programs, organic farmers, caterers
MIND & SPIRIT
therapists, churches, workshops, retreat centers, support groups
BUSINESSES
sustainable businesses in the Southeast |
|
| |
|