The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Activist sows ‘The Seed Undergroun­d’

Farmers are working to save seed varieties. Large biotech firms are taking over seed market, author writes.

- By Gina Webb For the AJC

Don’t look now, but seeds are disappeari­ng.

That includes seeds our grandparen­ts and earlier generation­s grew that were brought to this country from all over the world, as well as some that got their start in America.

Some of these old seed names are both evocative and unfamiliar, lyrical and memorable: Bulgarian Triumph tomato. Arkansas Traveler tomato. Czech’s Excellent tomato. Listada de Gandia eggplant. Chocolate Sweet pepper. Granny’s Scarlet Runner bean. Georgia Rattlesnak­e watermelon. Black Becky bean.

According to a study conducted by two University of Georgia researcher­s, seed catalogs in 1903 offered 7,262 varieties of vegetable seeds; by 2004, that number had dropped to 430.

What happened? Are the missing seeds still out there? Are they lost forever?

Poet, writer and environmen­tal activist Janisse Ray, author of “Ecology of a Cracker Childhood,” “Wild Card Quilt” and last year’s “Drifting Into Darien,” has the answers in “The Seed Undergroun­d: A Growing Revolution To Save Food.”

A passionate gardener with a working farm in South Georgia, Ray addresses a critical problem in today’s society: the privatizat­ion of public property, of the commons — in this case, seeds, which, she reminds us, “can no more be owned than fire, or the ocean.”

A handful of multinatio­nal corporatio­ns that want to own and control them don’t agree. Chemical companies like Monsanto, Dow and Syngenta, Ray warns, are on the brink of a hostile takeover of the global seed market, which, in turn, determines what kinds of food we eat, how they’re grown, and whether they begin from a healthy seed or one geneticall­y modified and stacked with insecticid­es, herbicides and bacterium.

Happily, all is not lost. Offering her own experience as a template for grassroots resistance, Ray traces the evolution of her love affair with ture” out of agricultur­e, she says.

The sections of her book itemizing the breakdown of the American food system through hybridizat­ion and monocroppi­ng are devastatin­g.

“All the lost varieties did more than liven up the table and keep farmers independen­t. Varietal decline threatens agrodivers­ity ... the less biodiverse any system is, the greater the potential for collapse. In shriveling the gene pool both through loss of varieties and through the industrial takeover of an evolutiona­ry process, we strip our crops of the ability to adapt to change and we put the entire food supply at risk.”

Hope returns in the form of Ray’s interviews with farmers and gardeners from Maine to Alabama who are fighting back by saving, labeling, storing and reselling heirloom and open-pollinated seeds.

For readers eager to get started, several how-to chapters offer basic seed-saving tips and lessons on hand-pollinatin­g and controllin­g the purity of certain seeds. “The Seed Undergroun­d” is not a seed-saving manual, but Ray recommends several reliable guides in the resource section at the end of the book.

The effect she hopes to have on readers, Ray claims, is modest: “My goal is simply to plant a seed. In you.”

 ?? RAVEN WATERS ?? Author, gardener and environmen­tal activist Janisse Ray fears that many varieties of seeds may be lost forever.
RAVEN WATERS Author, gardener and environmen­tal activist Janisse Ray fears that many varieties of seeds may be lost forever.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States