User Info
|
|
||||||||||||||||||||||||
| My Groups: | Slow Food | SPROUT Seed Library | The Ecology of Leadership |
Network [List] · [Visualize]
Connected with 7 organizations
Connected with 33 people
Connected with 0 resources
Connected with 0 solutions
Connected with 0 jobs
Connected with 1 event
Connected with 0 wikipages
Areas of Focus
Organic Farming
(3630 people) | Biocultural Diversity
(1744 people) | Seed Conservation
(1628 people) | Youth Education and Empowerment
(3869 people) | Community Participation
(3625 people) | Cultural Heritage Conservation
(1237 people) | Fire Ecology
(381 people) | Pollination Ecology
(348 people) | Soil Ecology
(780 people) | Mycology
(425 people) | Access To Education
(2285 people) | Sustainability Education
(4199 people) | Local Food Systems
(2853 people) | Fair Trade
(2538 people) | Cancer
(510 people) | Alternative Medicine
(2838 people) | Environmental Health
(1493 people) | Health Education
(1206 people) | Pesticides
(468 people) | Public Health
(1207 people) | Infectious Diseases
(405 people) | Green Hospital Movement
(694 people) | Ecological Change and Emerging Diseases
(671 people) | Human Rights and Civil Liberties
(2049 people) | Rights and Equality of LGBT
(675 people) | Photography
(1708 people) | Conflict Resolution
(1848 people) | Endangered Plant Species Protection
(950 people) | Ethnobotany
(1031 people) | Plant Ecology
(914 people) | Endemic Plant Species Protection
(539 people) | Family Planning
(623 people) | Sustainability, Religious and Spiritual Issues
(2669 people) | Senior Volunteerism and Mentoring
(602 people) | EcoVillages
(2794 people) | Sustainable Communities
(4066 people) | Urban Revitalization
(1184 people) | Biomimicry
(1613 people) | Sustainable Building
(3010 people) | Green Roofs
(1591 people) | Sustainability and Technology
(2119 people) | Water and Sustainable Development
(1908 people) | Watershed Management
(1247 people) | Women's Health
(1189 people) | Women's Empowerment
(1833 people) | Women's Education
(1074 people) | Female Genital Cutting
(405 people) | Women and the Environment
(1179 people)
About
I came to WiserEarth through a desire to connect with a larger community via a grassroots seed saving and biodiversity germinating organization, the Seed and Plant Resource OUTreach, SPROUT Seed Library, which now has a group page.
at the bottom is the latest project the Chautauqua Seed Fest & Revue, check it out!
Growing up in San Francisco with a nature loving soul has lead to a divers life thus far~ a firefighter (back at it with Bolinas Fire), midwife, hot spring adventurer, high school teacher, traveler, mountaineer, river guide, seedy librarian and a student of life. While tending the garden of the seed library I returned to school to add RN to the hats I wear.
| The SPROUT Seed Library is a community resource that provides open
pollinated, pesticide and genetically engineered free seeds for members
to 'borrow,' plant, select plants that display desired qualities, grow
those plants out for seed and return some seeds to the seed library for
others to borrow. Our seed collection focuses on vegetables, flowers,
herbs and medicinal plants. We strive to cultivate plants that are
uniquely suited to the coastal influenced garden~ welcoming the entire
Bay Area and beyond. As our membership grows, so do our plant and seed
resources available for lending. We offer our entire collection for
borrow~ select your choice seeds in quantity that you will plant~ we
ask you commit to grow-out one variety for seed. For example, you are
new to seed saving yet have a garden and borrow broccoli, chard, beets,
squash, tomatoes, corn and several varieties of legume seeds. You note
on the easy seed saving list that tomatoes and legumes are
self-pollinated, which makes them a good selection for easy seed
saving. You attend a SPROUT seed saving class~ learn the basics for
seed saving and watch your garden grow. Come harvest time you note the
plants of the delicious romano beans you selected for saving and skip
over the chosen plants returning when the pods are dry to harvest you
seeds for processing and return some to the library for others to
borrow. (along with your descriptor list~ telling us about you and your
plants journey that season) |
![]() |
![]() |
The Seed and Plant Resource OUT reach was born four years ago after meeting Percy Schmeiser at a Bioneers conference. I was outraged that a corporation could perpetrate such blatant disregard contaminating Percy’s heirloom seed stock with their genetically modified pollen. Coupled with the judicial and legislative collusion my anger gave way to fear that gratefully transformed into action in the formation of the SPROUT Seed Library. The heart of this work comes from my relationship with natural world~ my study and my professional practice of medicinal herbalism, homebirth midwifery and a love of being in the natural world. SPROUT nurtures borrowers of seeds enter into relationship with one plant nurturing and tending it throughout its growth cycle culminating with a bounty of seeds some of which is returned to the seed library for others. This relationship, not only with our food but also with the plants themselves is a powerful connection to our nature~ with the potential of healing, nurturing and literally feeding our beings while realigning our relations with the natural world. |
Chautauqua ~ January 17th 2009 Bolinas Community centerJanuary 17th is our 2nd annual Chautauqua Seed Fest~ a joint production of The SPROUT Seed Library and OAECThe day is a collaboration of local groups supporting ecology relations~ farmers, sustainability groups, gardeners, seed savers, musicians, story tellers, poets, visual artists, sculptors, clowns and all that encompasses our community. |
![]() |
Comments (1 - 1 of 1)
Login to Post a Comment.
|
Remove caseyallen 11 months ago
Check out Alemany Farm in SF. Growin food and native plants. We have work days on the weekends and Mondays afternoons. We are having a native plant work day Sun. the 18th 12-5pm. My business partner Brett is there on mondays. we run a green landscaping company called San Francisco Landscapes. thanks
|
1 to 1 of 1 Comments






