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Agriculture has changed significantly in the past century. Bigger machines, bigger farms and bigger budgets allow fewer farmers to produce more food. Changes in science and policy have also resulted in an industry in which power over what we grow and eat is increasingly held by very few.
Consider one of agriculture’s most basic inputs: the seed. Although there have long been farmers and merchants who specialised in growing and selling seeds, it wasn’t until the 20th century that people started talking about seed production as an industrial process. Thanks to changes in farming, science and government regulations, most of the “elite” seed that is bought and sold around the world today is mass produced and mass marketed — by just four transnational corporations.
This transition has made many people uneasy. As a result, a new movement is growing, one that aims to wrest power back through the renewal of an age-old agricultural task: setting aside some seeds from each season’s harvest to plant in the next. Community gardeners, home growers and small-scale farmers increasingly insist that seeds should be something they produce themselves, or get from a friend or neighbour, rather than something they buy off the shelf.
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1/26 The Savills and David Harber Garden
The Savills and David Harber Garden, endorsed by the Environmental Change Institute, champions the 'benefit and beauty' of trees, plants and grass in urban areas. It does this by filtering the surrounding air with its bio-diverse selection of trees, planted wall filters and a filtration pool. Jazz singer Natalie Rushdie performed during the unveiling of the garden.
AFP/Getty
2/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
Swedish furniture company IKEA collaborated with designer Tom Dixon to create the IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World garden. The aim of the garden is to demonstrate the positive impact of ‘urban growing’, the act of cultivating plants in urban areas. ‘The garden aims to show it’s possible, affordable and rewarding to have a place to grow your own food in the city for a healthier and more sustainable lifestyle which has a positive impact on both people and the planet,’ the RHS states.
AFP/Getty
3/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
A robotic arm is used to stimulate the growth of spores as Chinese mushrooms are grown under artificial light.
AFP/Getty
4/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
An attendee of the Chelsea Flower Show takes a photograph of vegetables being grown under artificial light.
AFP/Getty Images
5/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
The IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World garden features an area called 'The Hyperreal Garden', a horticultural laboratory where hyper-natural edibles are grown using hydroponic technology.
AP
6/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
A woman views a tower garden at the IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World garden.
PA
7/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
Chinese mushrooms grow under artificial light.
AFP/Getty
8/26 RHS Chelsea Flower Show
Two Chelsea Pensioners walk past a floral display based on children's television programs at Chelsea Flower Show
REUTERS
9/26 The RHS Back to Nature Garden
The Duchess of Cambridge demonstrated her green thumb with the creation of the Back to Nature garden at this year's RHS Chelsea Flower Show. Designed in collaboration with landscape architects Andrée Davies and Adam White, the aim of the wild garden is to provide a 'beautiful natural space for families to get together, play, dig, grow plants, connect with nature and spend time in the great outdoors'.
AFP/Getty
10/26 The RHS Back to Nature Garden
The RHS Back to Nature Garden features a treehouse as part of its design. The treehouse includes a ladder and a rope swing, on which the Duchess of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis have been pictured.
Getty
11/26 The RHS Back to Nature Garden
Prince George and Prince Louis explore the Back to Nature garden with their parents, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.
Kensington Palace/AFP/Getty
12/26 Floella's Future stand
Actor and TV presenter Baroness Floella Benjamin created a display at the Chelsea Flower Show called Floella's Future. The display a a surrealist feast for the eyes, featuring a large head sculpture, a miniature van on a road, a large foot made of twigs and miniature figurines placed among flowers.
AP
13/26 Facebook: Beyond the Screen
The inspiration behind the Facebook: Beyond the Screen garden is the coalescence between our online and offline lives, demonstrating how the ‘smartphone generation is using technology to make a positive change in the real world’. Designed by Joe Perkins, the layout of the garden includes features such as bodies of water, to demonstrate the fluidity between our online and offline personas; and tidal rock pools, which the RHS states symbolise ‘both connection and change and dramatic sedimentary rock formations.
PA
14/26 Facebook: Beyond the Screen
Chelsea Flower Show guests write down their top gardening tips and hand them on 'The Message Tree' in the Facebook: Beyond the Screen garden.
PA
15/26 Facebook: Beyond the Screen
The Facebook: Beyond the Screen garden features a wooden bank on which deckchairs, a table and a beanie bag are situated, all of which are covered with a canopy. Water and rock formations make up the majority of the design.
PA
16/26 RHS Chelsea Flower Show
Lupins on display at the annual garden event at Royal Hospital Chelsea.
Reuters
17/26 D-Day 75 Garden
In November last year, a campaign was launched in support of the creation of a commemorative garden in honour of the 75th anniversary of the 6 June 1944 D-Day Landings in Normandy during the Second World War. The garden features a selection of sculptures paying homage to the soldiers who were present at the seaborne invasion.
AFP/Getty
18/26 D-Day 75 Garden
World War II Normandy veterans pose for photographs as they visit the D-Day 75 Garden at the Chelsea Flower Show.
AP
19/26 RHS Chelsea Flower Show
Chelsea Pensioners take part in a photocall on a stand at Chelsea Flower Show
AP
20/26 D-Day 75 Garden
Garden designer John Everiss created sculptures of Second World War soldiers by basing his designs on 3D-scanned images he took of volunteers dressed in period army uniforms.
REUTERS
21/26 RHS Chelsea Flower Show
A model poses with Peony design body point and hat at Chelsea Flower Show
AP
22/26 Harmonious Garden of Life
The Harmonious Garden of Life, designed by Laurélie de la Salle, brings together ‘four kingdoms’ – mineral, vegetable, animal and human – with the four elements – air, earth, water and fire. Featuring a pergola, a pond and an enclosure wall, the garden raises awareness of environmental issues by offering ‘solutions to regenerate our ecosystem in response to global warming, pollution and depletion of resources’, the RHS says.
AFP/Getty
23/26 The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden
The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden celebrates the work of Montessori St Nicholas, a charity which promotes education using the Montessori teaching method. The garden features two greenhouses, one of which allows children to grow micro vegetables and leaves for salads and sandwiches. The second greenhouse is inspired by Victorian greenhouses.
AFP/Getty
24/26 The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden
Children play in the Montessori Centenary Children's Garden, which was designed by Jody Lidgard.
AFP/Getty
25/26 The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden
Visitors inspect the garden, which took inspiration from the Montessori teaching method.
AFP/Getty
26/26 The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden
An insect house hangs from a tree at the Montessori Centenary Children's Garden, designed with a smiley face.
AFP/Getty
1/26 The Savills and David Harber Garden
The Savills and David Harber Garden, endorsed by the Environmental Change Institute, champions the 'benefit and beauty' of trees, plants and grass in urban areas. It does this by filtering the surrounding air with its bio-diverse selection of trees, planted wall filters and a filtration pool. Jazz singer Natalie Rushdie performed during the unveiling of the garden.
AFP/Getty
2/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
Swedish furniture company IKEA collaborated with designer Tom Dixon to create the IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World garden. The aim of the garden is to demonstrate the positive impact of ‘urban growing’, the act of cultivating plants in urban areas. ‘The garden aims to show it’s possible, affordable and rewarding to have a place to grow your own food in the city for a healthier and more sustainable lifestyle which has a positive impact on both people and the planet,’ the RHS states.
AFP/Getty
3/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
A robotic arm is used to stimulate the growth of spores as Chinese mushrooms are grown under artificial light.
AFP/Getty
4/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
An attendee of the Chelsea Flower Show takes a photograph of vegetables being grown under artificial light.
AFP/Getty Images
5/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
The IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World garden features an area called 'The Hyperreal Garden', a horticultural laboratory where hyper-natural edibles are grown using hydroponic technology.
AP
6/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
A woman views a tower garden at the IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World garden.
PA
7/26 IKEA and Tom Dixon: Gardening Will Save The World
Chinese mushrooms grow under artificial light.
AFP/Getty
8/26 RHS Chelsea Flower Show
Two Chelsea Pensioners walk past a floral display based on children's television programs at Chelsea Flower Show
REUTERS
9/26 The RHS Back to Nature Garden
The Duchess of Cambridge demonstrated her green thumb with the creation of the Back to Nature garden at this year's RHS Chelsea Flower Show. Designed in collaboration with landscape architects Andrée Davies and Adam White, the aim of the wild garden is to provide a 'beautiful natural space for families to get together, play, dig, grow plants, connect with nature and spend time in the great outdoors'.
AFP/Getty
10/26 The RHS Back to Nature Garden
The RHS Back to Nature Garden features a treehouse as part of its design. The treehouse includes a ladder and a rope swing, on which the Duchess of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte and Prince Louis have been pictured.
Getty
11/26 The RHS Back to Nature Garden
Prince George and Prince Louis explore the Back to Nature garden with their parents, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge.
Kensington Palace/AFP/Getty
12/26 Floella's Future stand
Actor and TV presenter Baroness Floella Benjamin created a display at the Chelsea Flower Show called Floella's Future. The display a a surrealist feast for the eyes, featuring a large head sculpture, a miniature van on a road, a large foot made of twigs and miniature figurines placed among flowers.
AP
13/26 Facebook: Beyond the Screen
The inspiration behind the Facebook: Beyond the Screen garden is the coalescence between our online and offline lives, demonstrating how the ‘smartphone generation is using technology to make a positive change in the real world’. Designed by Joe Perkins, the layout of the garden includes features such as bodies of water, to demonstrate the fluidity between our online and offline personas; and tidal rock pools, which the RHS states symbolise ‘both connection and change and dramatic sedimentary rock formations.
PA
14/26 Facebook: Beyond the Screen
Chelsea Flower Show guests write down their top gardening tips and hand them on 'The Message Tree' in the Facebook: Beyond the Screen garden.
PA
15/26 Facebook: Beyond the Screen
The Facebook: Beyond the Screen garden features a wooden bank on which deckchairs, a table and a beanie bag are situated, all of which are covered with a canopy. Water and rock formations make up the majority of the design.
PA
16/26 RHS Chelsea Flower Show
Lupins on display at the annual garden event at Royal Hospital Chelsea.
Reuters
17/26 D-Day 75 Garden
In November last year, a campaign was launched in support of the creation of a commemorative garden in honour of the 75th anniversary of the 6 June 1944 D-Day Landings in Normandy during the Second World War. The garden features a selection of sculptures paying homage to the soldiers who were present at the seaborne invasion.
AFP/Getty
18/26 D-Day 75 Garden
World War II Normandy veterans pose for photographs as they visit the D-Day 75 Garden at the Chelsea Flower Show.
AP
19/26 RHS Chelsea Flower Show
Chelsea Pensioners take part in a photocall on a stand at Chelsea Flower Show
AP
20/26 D-Day 75 Garden
Garden designer John Everiss created sculptures of Second World War soldiers by basing his designs on 3D-scanned images he took of volunteers dressed in period army uniforms.
REUTERS
21/26 RHS Chelsea Flower Show
A model poses with Peony design body point and hat at Chelsea Flower Show
AP
22/26 Harmonious Garden of Life
The Harmonious Garden of Life, designed by Laurélie de la Salle, brings together ‘four kingdoms’ – mineral, vegetable, animal and human – with the four elements – air, earth, water and fire. Featuring a pergola, a pond and an enclosure wall, the garden raises awareness of environmental issues by offering ‘solutions to regenerate our ecosystem in response to global warming, pollution and depletion of resources’, the RHS says.
AFP/Getty
23/26 The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden
The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden celebrates the work of Montessori St Nicholas, a charity which promotes education using the Montessori teaching method. The garden features two greenhouses, one of which allows children to grow micro vegetables and leaves for salads and sandwiches. The second greenhouse is inspired by Victorian greenhouses.
AFP/Getty
24/26 The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden
Children play in the Montessori Centenary Children's Garden, which was designed by Jody Lidgard.
AFP/Getty
25/26 The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden
Visitors inspect the garden, which took inspiration from the Montessori teaching method.
AFP/Getty
26/26 The Montessori Centenary Children's Garden
An insect house hangs from a tree at the Montessori Centenary Children's Garden, designed with a smiley face.
AFP/Getty
For some, seed saving is a way of keeping history alive, for example by growing the vegetable varieties their grandparents enjoyed. For others, it’s a way to save money, or to connect with their community. And today, it is increasingly a political statement – a choice that allows consumers to avoid fruits, vegetables and other foods produced at an industrial scale. Depending on the grower, it may even be all of these — and more.
Many seed savers are motivated by the idea that their actions contribute to keeping diverse crop varieties from disappearing, especially those ignored by industrial farms or commercial seed companies in their pursuit of profit. Organisations such as the Heritage Seed Library (UK) and the Seed Savers Exchange (US), and the growers they represent, routinely connect the individual acts of growing, storing and sharing seed with a global conservation mission. In cultivating awareness of this connection, they have transformed a timeless task into a powerful political act.
So how exactly did this transformation occur? New historical research shows that concerned citizens and organisations have worked hard to make it happen.
Vanishing vegetables
The Heritage Seed Library, today a part of the British non-profit Garden Organic, offers a case in point. This collection of 800 or so local and rare vegetable varieties has its roots in a campaign to save endangered vegetables that Garden Organic launched in the 1970s, back when it was known as the Henry Doubleday Research Association, or HDRA.
At the time, the HDRA was well established as source of expert advice on organic gardening in Britain. Its director Lawrence Hills had founded the organisation in 1954 to encourage gardeners to experiment with natural pest deterrents, green manures and other alternatives to the synthetic chemicals that were becoming common in agriculture.
Among the many subjects on which the HDRA offered advice from its earliest days was helping “own growers” — backyard gardeners, allotments holders, and others growing food to eat themselves — to decide what varieties to plant. Hills was adamant that newer types of tomatoes, carrots and green beans lacked the flavour of earlier generations and performed worse in small-scale cultivation.
He was therefore dismayed to learn in the early 1970s that changes in British agricultural regulations would make it difficult for seed companies to sell “old-fashioned varieties”. He feared, rightly, that the small market for such seeds would not justify the price that a company would now have to pay to register these for legal sale. If seed companies weren’t stocking them – and growers accustomed to buying their seed weren’t saving them – these old-fashioned varieties would simply disappear.
In a 1975 letter to The Times, Hills announced an initiative of the HDRA intended to address this impending extinction crisis: establishing a collection of Europe’s “vanishing vegetables” at the HDRA.
From bank to library
Hills asked fellow gardeners to help him locate as many uncommon varieties as possible. Ambitious as it was, that collection was only the start.
The HDRA soon began a campaign to start a “seed bank”. Hills envisioned that this long-term storage facility would gather and preserve vegetable varieties from around the world. In this sense, it would be just like a few already existing international seed banks, which ensured that diverse seeds would be available for plant breeders in the future. Unlike those seed banks (also called “genebanks”), the vegetable collection that Hills imagined would have a public-facing component, a “seed library” that any grower, regardless of professional expertise, would be able to access.
Both seed bank and seed library eventually came to fruition, though not in a single institution. When it became apparent during planning that a government-supported Vegetable Gene Bank would mainly serve professional researchers, Hills and HDRA staff organised The Heritage Vegetable Seed Library for Research and Experiment — later shortened to the Heritage Seed Library — to serve the needs of ordinary gardeners. Launched in February 1978, the library gave away seed of its rare varieties to subscribing members.
The Heritage Seed Library was the more innovative of the two projects, and arguably the more transformative of British vegetable conservation in the long term. This was because it emphasised the need for the active participation of individual gardeners to to achieve conservation goals. The library only functioned with the help of “seed guardians” who helped keep it stocked with seed. HDRA also encouraged library users to learn how to save their own seed.
Together with other HDRA initiatives, the seed library helped cement the idea that conservation of vegetable diversity would only succeed through the commitment of ordinary gardeners to purchasing, growing, saving and circulating seeds of useful or delicious varieties.
Today, many home and allotment gardeners who save seeds see themselves as protectors of endangered plants – and their gardens as repositories of important biodiversity. They believe that their stewardship of vegetable diversity contributes to the possibilities for a better, fairer global food system in the future. The history of the HDRA reminds us that there was — and still is — work involved in connecting these individual acts of seed saving to the future of the world’s food.
Helen Anne Curry is a Peter Lipton senior lecturer in the history of modern science and technology at the University of Cambridge. This article first appeared on The Conversation