Back to February 2025 Newsletter
Every year, we invite our members to participate in seed saving projects for beginners and experts.
If you're new to saving seeds, or you have a few years of experience, we invite you to get involved in the Community Seed Grow-out projects below. These are aimed toward gardeners with good experience growing plants, enough space for proper seed-saving isolation, and an enthusiasm for multiplying seeds for next year's projects and for sharing with other gardeners in your community next year.
If you have lots of experience, we invite you to join these projects, but we especially need your help with our Core Seed Library grow-outs (please scroll to the bottom).
Deadlines extended to March 15 !
All members are welcome to join. If your membership has expired, all you have to do is confirm your contact details and renew for free!
Our members have shared an assortment of Canadian tomato seeds - varieties bred in Canada or with a long history of being well-adapted to our growing conditions. Your project will be to grow 6 or more tomato plants, take observations through the season, and save seeds to help share those varieties next year. We also hope that you'll share seeds with others in your community.
Requirements:
Join by March 15, 2025 - members can login here to reserve their seeds
We've chosen several bean varieties that we think hold promise to thrive in Canadian growing conditions. We're looking for gardeners who can grow some beans, take detailed notes during the growing season, and save seeds so we can continue this program next year.
Requirements:
Join by March 15, 2025 - members can login here to reserve their seeds
For the past 5 years, gardeners across the country have been working together to develop an upright-growing variety of ground cherry (Physalis pruinosa), planting the prior year’s seed and making selections.
Ground cherries (Physalis pruinosa) are small, sweet, golden-yellow berries that are relatives of tomatillos and tomatoes. Each fruit is enclosed in a wrapper, and it falls from the plant when ripe, so you harvest by picking them off the ground. Since low-growing branches make the berries hard to see, we're breeding for upright branches and good flavour.
Every time we repeat this process we get closer to the goal of a ground cherry that tastes great, and bears on upright (easy to harvest) plants.
Requirements:
Join by March 3, 2025 - members can login here to reserve their seeds
In addition to our Community Grow-Outs, we are always looking for experienced seed savers who can help multiply the especially rare seeds in our Canadian Seed Library collection.
If you're an experienced seed saver interested in helping with preserving high priority varieties for the Seed Library, please fill out THIS FORM (or contact our Seed Library Co-ordinator at growers@seeds.ca with any questions)
An annual membership to Seeds of Diversity gives you access to our seed exchange, seed grow-out programs, and our online news.
Thank you for your support!