My book and web site

Check out my book, The Sustainable-Enough Garden, available on Amazon, and the book's web site at www.thesustainable-enoughgarden.com. See more plant photos on Instagram.

Monday, December 23, 2019

Sustainable sourcing

I’ve received the first seed catalog of the season! It’s time to start ordering seeds and planning plant purchases for next spring. I want to be realistic and environmentally sound. That poses some new challenges this year.

Previous years' seeds were stored in the refrigerator

    I love spending cold winter evenings mooning over catalog portraits of perfect vegetables and lush, bright flowers. A seed packet doesn’t cost much, and I convince myself that I’ll find space for that special squash vine or those five varieties of string beans. I also tend to over-estimate how many sunny spots there are for annual flowers in the insectary bed or the perennial borders.


Everything looks perfect in the catalog

    The miracle of seeds germinating and sending up their first leaves never gets old for me. I like sowing seeds and coddling seedlings through their first weeks under lights. I don’t do so well with the next stage, growing those seedlings into sturdy young plants bursting with energy for their move to the garden. When I compare my willowy seedlings to their hearty counterparts at the garden center, I often resolve to stop sowing seeds at home and depend on the experts.


My zinnia seedlings look puny compared to the garden center's

    This year things look more complicated for two reasons. First, I’m still trying to avoid introducing neonicotinoid insecticides into my yard. Even seeds may be treated with these pesticides, which are toxic to bees and other beneficial insects and persist for years in soil and plant tissues. I don’t want them here because I’m trying to foster native insects, not kill them. In addition to shopping for neonic-free plants, no easy task, I also aim to buy seeds that aren’t treated with pesticides.


Neonics poison bees when they visit flowers

    That’s why I prioritize organically-produced seeds, sure to be pesticide-free. It’s convenient that the year’s first seed catalog comes from The Natural Gardening Company, the oldest certified organic nursery in the country. This seed house emphasizes vegetables over flowers, and being in California, they don’t necessarily feature varieties suited for the Northeast.     


     Closer to home, there’s Johnny’s Selected Seeds in Maine, which offers lots of organic seeds. Even if they're not organic, Johnny’s seeds are untreated, and none contain neonicotinoids. Even Burpee offers some organic seeds. It’s hard to pass up beautiful new varieties in the catalogs that aren’t organic, but I have enough organic choices to make
it bearable.

Basil and borage growing from neonic-free organic seeds

    Second, I’ve made it a goal to buy less plastic with my garden purchases. That means trying to bring home fewer plastic six-packs and individual plastic pots of seedlings. For the last couple of years, my friend Jennifer and I have bought some of our herbs in fiber pots. These are theoretically compostable. At my house, they turn into dog chews before they can decompose. At least they’re plastic-free.


    What about the rest of my plant purchases? Almost all at local garden centers will be offered in plastic pots. 


Organically-grown seedlings, but they're in plastic pots

I’m going to look into bareroot options. Strawberry plants are often shipped this way without soil or containers, and I’ve read that other plants can be too. Let’s share sources!

                         Happy Holidays

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