- Who put pepper in my shiraz? Human diversity meets grape diversity meets pepper diversity.
- High-priced fertilizers bring guano back. No shit. Via.
- Rebsie breeds a unique red-podded pea. Gregor repeats, “You go girl.”
- Another backyard breeder bares all. Mass crosses, mass selection.
- Eye in the sky informs on crop performance. No comment (yet) from Larry and Sergei.
- Understanding the US Farm Bill. Questions?
- Things to do with Phormium tenax.
- Popular as a pomegranate? Via.
Where to find seeds
This just in:
Thanks for putting Semilla Besada on your list of seed suppliers. I noted your comment that you could not find a list of seeds, and I am writing to explain why:) As our seeds are heritage or heirloom varieties, they are not on the EU approved list, so it is illegal to make them available for sale. So we have created a Heritage Seed Library, and are offering the opportunity for people living in dryland environments to swap seeds, so that we can keep the genetic biodiversity going, and extend those climate adapted varieties that suit dryland conditions to similar environments. Anyone interested should simply email us through the website. In the meantime, I will put up a link as Seed Swap Club so people can see more clearly how to contact us.
all the best,
Aspen
You can find Semilla Besada among the many links on our Seeds page. And if you know of sources that aren’t there, please share.
Nibbles: IT, Banana
- Ordering pizza on your iPhone? Would you like germplasm with that? Thanks, Samy.
- The banana commodity chain unpacked (check out the “brief” too). Thanks, Mary.
Nibbles: Potato, Cheese, Edible landscapes, Apples, Bees, Cacao, Vegetables
- The Guardian has a leader on the potato. Please let this year end soon. And thanks, Danny.
- Lucy Appleby RIP.
- Inner city farming in the UK.
- Gary Nabhan on where apples came from, and where they’re going. And more. Thanks again, Danny!
- Tracking bees’ response to climate change by satellite.
- Mars thinks cacao biodiversity is important. No news from Earth.
- The “keyhole gardens” of Lesotho.
Talking about Vavilov
The New York Botanical Garden hosted a World Science Festival panel discussion about Nikolai Vavilov on 31 May. The moderator, Carl Zimmer, has a video of a conversation with co-panelist Peter Pringle on his blog. 1 Pringle is the author of The Murder of Nikolai Vavilov.
Later stiil: Check out the comment from Cary Fowler on Svalbard, though.