Truly Natural Seeds for the Garden
RELATED
by Diane di Costanzo
by Lori Bongiorno
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It starts with the seed. Many gardeners, planning to grow organically, never realize that the conventional seeds they purchase could already be tainted. Not only might they have been harvested from chemically grown plants but "many seeds are also then treated with insecticides or fungicides prior to sale," writes Kenny Ausubel in Seeds of Change: The Living Treasure (HarperSanFrancisco, 1994).
On top of this, the agribusiness giants who sell genetically modified (GM) products to farmers are also free to sell GM seeds to home gardeners-and, according to our current laws, without adding warning labels to the seed packets. Clearly, organic and heirloom seeds are the way to grow. To find them, contact:
Seeds of Change
www.seedsofchange.com;
888-762-7333.
Peaceful Valley Farm Supply
www.groworganic.com;
888-784-1722.
Seed Savers Exchange
www.seedsavers.org;
563-382-5990.
The Natural Gardening Company
www.naturalgardening.com;
707-766-9303.
Planet Natural
www.planetnatural.com;
800-289-6656 (for heirloom seeds, guaranteed unaltered).
The Cook's Garden
www.cooksgarden.com;
800-457-9703.
Green Guide 95 | March/April 2003 | For Gardeners
The Green Guide To Go
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