Seed Saving

This is a fantastic post by Heather Thorpe to help you start seed saving! 

Remember if you have any spare seeds we are more than happy to accept them for our seed bank. Please ensure they are dry, labelled and dated.You can bring excess seeds to any of our events or send them to:

Urban Farming Tasmania
C/- P.O. BRACKNELL
TASMANIA 7302

There are three main points to remember when saving seed.

1)      To allow the seed to mature enough

2)      To dry it properly

3)      To store it correctly

It is soooo important to make sure that your seed is mature enough to make it viable. Seeds go through several changes during their existence. They are the plants guarantee of continuation and would normally fall to the ground at the end of the life of the plant or the end of the season. It is necessary to follow this natural pattern to have seeds that will produce new plants.

Sometimes it is impractical to leave the plants in situ as you may need that growing space. There is a way to overcome this. You dig the plant up with its roots still attached and hang it upside down under cover out of the sunlight. This allows the enzymes that complete the maturation of the plant to finish the job.

Dried Rainbow Chard Seed

Dried Rainbow Chard Seed

Silver beet Hanging to Dry

Silver beet Hanging to Dry

Red Russian Kale

Red Russian Kale

Leave the plants hanging like this until you see the pods starting to open or the seeds just come away if you rub them very lightly.

The next stage is to put the seeds into Brown paper bags, label them and hang them to dry properly. I use an indoor clothesline to do this as it is out of direct sunlight.

Seeds in Paper bags drying

Seeds in Paper bags drying

You can tell if seeds are dry enough two ways that I’m aware of. One is to snap it in half and it must actually snap. The other way is to bang it with a hammer and see if it shatters. If you don’t dry the seeds properly all you effort will be in vain and they will either sprout or go mouldy during storing.

The next stage is to do a test sow. This is very easy. Put a tissue in a saucer, put the seeds on the tissue and pour water over them. It is VERY important not to let the seeds dry out as it will halt the growing cycle and they will die. *

Put the saucer in a warm place with plenty of light. They should sprout within 14 days.

If you wish to grow them on just bury them and keep them moist.

Leave the rest of the seeds hanging in the paper bag whilst you do this.

Fennel seeds

Fennel seeds

Fennel Seeds

Fennel Seeds

Kale seed removed from pods

Kale seed removed from pods

If you have had success with your test then it’s time to store your seeds. The optimum storage in my experience is a tin with a tight fitting lid e.g. a Milo tin. I’ve had viable seed after 8 years when storing this way.

PLEASE DO NOT STORE IN PLASTIC CONTAINERS UNLESS YOUR 100% SURE THAT YOUR SEEDS ARE COMPLETELY DRY.

More information and resources can be found at http://urbanfarmingtasmania.org/seed-bank/

 

Seed Saving

At the moment I am chasing seeds, with brown bags and drying trays cluttering the house. I am always amazed at how many seeds can be obtained from one plant and the potential food that can be then grown.

So how easy or hard is seed saving? I think its like most things you need to start somewhere and then you improve!

So start this summer, collect some seed, grow some free food. If you have too much we are happy to take the excess

Remember to label at least with seed type, date, location and description (We love the imaginative descriptions)

Here are some great resources for improving your skills

Real Seed Company Handouts At the bottom of the left column are several great short hand outs for free

Seed Alliance Booklet Down load a 30 page booklet. Great chart about distance between plants for seed collection

Seed Savers Books and Booklets Great website, school resources as well

ABC gardening video 3.26 mins Talking about genetic variation, adaption of plants to environment and tomato seed saving.

Youtube  Think of the seed and I think you will find the video!

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Autumn & Winter Seed

Autumn/Winter Seed list- 60 good reasons to grow through winter!

Although we are in the depth of summer it is time to plan ahead and start thinking of the colder months. We have a list of autumn and winter seed available from the seed bank below. These seeds will be at the Launceston Share market this Wednesday 15th January at the Tasmanian College of the Arts. They will then be available at the Colony 47 Garden Party in Hobart at the end of February (date to be confirmed).
Interested in collecting seed? The Real Seed Company in the UK has great online resources www.realseeds.co.uk/ . We are happy to accept donations of seed only from Tasmania, in person at markets and events or by mail to Bracknell P.O. 7320.

Beetroot
-Red Globe
-Forono
– Detroit

Broad Beans
-Coles Dwarf
-Early Long Pod
-Crimson
-Aquadulce

Broccoli
-kailaan Express
-purple Sicily
-romanesco

Brussels sprouts
-long island
-Ruby

Cabbage
-greyhound
-mini heirloom
-ruby ball
-Savoy king

Carrot
-Baby pak
Chicory
-Radicchio

Cauliflower
-purple
-white
-mini

Celery
-stringless

Cumin Black

Kohl Rabi

Kale
-minature
-Red Russian
-dinosaur

Lettuce
– red and green Salad
-green mignonette
-Lolla Rossa
-Iceberg

Leek
-Musselburgh
-Carentan
-Lyon Prizetaker
-Jaune du Poitou

Pak choi

Peas
-Massey
-Greenfeast
-Green feast Lincoln
-sugar snap-Cascadia

Onion
-Pickling Paris Silverskin
-Gladalan white
-Hunter River Brown
-Early Californian Red
-Red Marble
-Red Marksman
-Barletta

Shallot
-Roderique

Spinach
-perpetual

Silver beet
-Fordhook Giant
-colored

Spring Onion

Radish
-Sparkler
-Oriental white
-long scarlet

Rocket

Summer share markets

Launceston 12noon Wednesday 15th January
We will be hosting the first share market of the year in Launceston at the Inveresk Art School campus. Everyone is welcome just bring something to share. we welcome fruit, vegetables, seeds and gardening materials. Feel free to invite friends and family, the more the merrier. New winter seed will be available to start your winter patch nice and early.
Directions: go to QVMAG (museum Inveresk, the Art school is next door opposite Blue cafe and to the right of the yellow bolt sculpture. We will be in the middle of the art school past the gallery.

Hobart: We will be hosting a share market at Colony 47 at the end of February

Photos from previous markets:

1170895_343376762464578_1493450753_n OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA Monday Market by Urban Farming Tasmania Monday Market by Urban Farming Tasmania 913833_284788124990109_1935317179_o 919053_287267601408828_1331382399_o 465896_287267478075507_1185325084_o 463926_287267628075492_110648157_o====

Vegi Patch @ the Taste!

12noon New Year’s Day we will be at the Vegi Patch on Parliament Lawns at the Taste. We will have lots of seeds, seedlings, no dig gardens, seed bombs and much more. Its free and great for the kids. So come along and have some fun and show your support to the council for urban farming. Here is the link

!2noon Wednesday 15th Jan Launceston Share Market is on for the Art Summer school at Inveresk Campus. Please bring seed, seedling, produce, lots to share, its all free!

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Seed by Mail

Would you like to grow for the Sustainable Living Festival, Kids Expo or Family Fun Day but have NO seed or plants?
Then let us know, we have 100 stamps and are happy to send seed out to those in Tassie who would like to grow for these events.  Not sure about growing from seed then we have 100’s of seedlings and mature plants which need foster families for 2 months. No experience needed, only water, sunshine and TLC.
13th Oct Family Fun Day St Davids Park Hobart
-19th Oct Kids Expo City Park Launceston
-9/11th November Sustainable Living Festival, P{rince’s Wharf 1 Hobart
We always need DONATIONS OF SEED to keep these events going, its is easy, fun and saves lot of money. Here is a great link to a free resource on how to collect seed. www.realseeds.co.uk/seedsavinginfo

Please send an email to urbanfarmingtasmania@hotmail.com
Cheers Bridgette

Seed bank & Events

CALLING ALL SEEDS, SEED COLLECTORS & GROWERS
We have a busy week with 3 events this week for Fair Food Week, Uni Open Day and the launch of the Tassie Food Forest project. Pleasse COLLECT & DONATE seed at the following events this week:

-Wednesday 6pm Urban Argriculture Forum Hobart
-Saturday 1pm Source Community Garden Share Festival
-Sunday 10am Big Market Day Launceston
10am Seed preservation and storage by Heather Thorpe & Sharon Campbel-Zeni
11am the WHOLE Lemon by Tanya Murray
12am Urban Beed Keeping by Ian Hewit from Eee’s Bees and Malcolm Bowden
All day, seed & produce swap, Mini Vegi Patch Fostering

Here is the list of the 95 varieties of fruit and vegetables in the Seed Bank that need growing, sharing and collecting.
artichoke purple
basil sweet genovase
bean broad crimson flower heirloom
bean climbing – purple king
bean scarlett runner
bean scarlett runner
bean soya
beans borlotti
beans drangons tounge
beans dwarf butter
beans dwarf purple queen
beans dwarf yellow
beans stringless pioneer
beans ying yang
beetroot burpees golden
beetroot heirloom mix
borrage blue
brasica kohl rabi
broad bean
brocolli cicco
brocolli romansco
brussel sprouts long island
brussel sprouts ruby
cabbage mini
capsicum mini sweet
capsicum store
carrot heirloom mix
carrot paris market
cauliflower mini
celery stringless
celery backyard
chilli hellfire mix
chilli jalaenpo peppers
corn sweet baby pop F1
corriander
cucumber double yeild
cucumber lebonese
cucumber mini white
cumin black
dill backyard
eggplant heirloom mix
eggplant listada de gandia
fennel backyard
gourd autumn wings
gourd decorative mixed
kale russian red
leek jaune du poitou heirloom
lettuce heirloom mix
lettuce lola rosa
lettuce lola rosa
mizuna red & lime streaks
ochra lady’s finger
onion barletta
onion red marble F1
onion red marksman
onion spring red
orach purple mountain spinach
parsley flat italian
parsnip backyard
pasley curley
peas snow
pepermint
pumpkin austrain hairloom mix
pumpkin australian butter
pumpkin butternut
pumpkin delicata mini sweet
pumpkin grey
pumpkin pennsylvania dutch crook neck
pumpkin pennsylvania dutch crook neck
pumpkin potimarron
pumpkin turks turbin
radish heirloom mix
rocket
shallots roderique hybrid
silverbeet coloured mix
silverbeet yellow
squash gem heirloom
squash jaune & verte
squash mix buttons
squash spaghetti
squash white scallop
strawberry sweet fresca
sunflower giant single
sunflower solar flash F1 dwarf
sunflower sun king
tomato 10 color heirloom mix
tomato black russian
tomato black russian
tomato rainbow beefsteak heirloom mix
tomato tommy toe red
tomato yellow pear
watermellon blacktail mountain
zuchinni tondo di paicenza
zuchinni tri color
zuchinni tromboncino heirloom

Seed bank & Events

Thank you to Rangeview seeds for a donation to the community seed bank! We are now restocked and ready to go! The seed bank is a free community collection of seeds open for donations and withdrawals by all the community. We are happy to visit any community or school event and garden to help promote growing your own, collecting seeds and sharing in the community. Please let us know if you would like the seed bank to visit you!

Our events in the next few months, we are always looking for help and donations, just let us know what you can do
26th-267th July Joining the dots, Meander Food Connect Conference, we are presenting and taking the seed bank along, car pool from Launceston and only gold coin donation but RSVP needed, we need people for Friday night.

-29th July Monday morning Planting Edible garden in Launceston Mall– We need helpers and plants!

3rd August Saturday 10am ‘Grow you Own’ presentation for NRM Tamar Sustainable August, Windsor Park Community Centre, We will be presenting and take the seed bank but here is also presentations by Sandy Murray, Tony Simmons, Deborah Collins, Jackie Lockhart,  Sue Woinarski, Nick Cummings,  Bruce Jackson, David Hamilton! Come along and help with our presentation!

25th August 10am-2pm the BIG Sunday Market for Fair Food week event, Sustainable August event for NRM Tamar and University Open Day. We will have the GREAT seed and seedling giveaway, workshops on gardening in small spaces, mini kitchen gardens and seed collection. If you would like to be involved with sharing your art, music, produce……..let us know, we will share plenty of fruit, vegetables, edible plants & art in return!

-3rd Weekend in October our first Urban Farming Workshop which can include bee keeping in the suburbs, keeping chooks, grafting and espalier trees and mead making! We have a great host and we just need to know who is interested and what you would like to know about! Yes it will be free but limited numbers

Other great events

Cross Pollinate Conference, 22nd July Ulverstone

Sustainable August by NRM Tamar, lots of great events every weekend through August

Fair Food Week 18th August-25th August, register an event online its free!

Fair Food Share and Swap Fest Source Community Garden Hobart  24th August Hobart 1pm-7pm  12 Frecnh Street Sandy Bay

Sprout Tasmania workshops 22nd July Cross Pollinate conference, 27th July Market Garden Production in Winter, 10th August Cygnet Polytunnels and extending the growing season

Sustainable Living Tasmania Events, 20th July Tasmanian insect Pests and guests, 20th July Fencing for farms and gardens, 24th August Soil biology and health, 27th August Fungi and ferment: making Tempeh, 31st August increasing crop yields in the Home Garden, 21st September Edible Weed Walk, 9th-11th November sustainable Living Tasmania Festival

Tasmanian Botanical Garden Heirloom Tomato event 21st September, needing helps now for the preparation ring the RTBG Nursery 62363082

Bridgewater Community Centre Gardening group Friday and Wednesday 10am-12noon, always looking for new people, donations of edible plants, materials to build gardens beds, people with gardening skills… talk to Chelsea ph 62634303 6 Bowden Drive

-Mt Faulkner Community Garden, Chigwell Monthly BBQ and Gardening

Land care Tasmania too many events to list check out the website

CENTS Community Exchange North West Tasmania, check this out for exchange of fresh produce and much more

North West Environment Centre check out the website and up and coming events

Please let us know what other great community events are out there, so we can spread the word!

UFT - seed bank poster

Tassie Food Forest

Tassie Food Forest is a project developed by Urban Farming Tasmania and sponsored by Colony 47. We are fundraising and looking for support from Government, Councils, non-government organsiations and businesses. We are also applying for a Community Food Grant due on the 2nd July.  If you think you can provide any of the following then please let us know:

·       letter of support on letter head

·       a pledge of cash and/or

·       a pledge of in kind support

If you would like more information the please click Sponsor Letter or email us at urbanfarmingtasmania@hotmail.com

We are currently supported by Bridgewater Community House, Deloraine Community House, Salvation Army, Launceston City Council, Sprout Tasmania, Eat Well Tasmania, NRM north, NRM Tamar, Understorey Network and University of Tasmania.

The Tassie Food Forest project aims to:

·       develop social networks through growing, collecting and sharing food

·       promote social inclusion of disadvantaged groups through fresh food events

·       improve access to free healthy safe fresh food

·       reduce waste of fruit and vegetables in the community,

·       teach methods of seasonal fruit and vegetable preparation

·       form relationships between the public and farmers

The activities would include:

·       developing a Tassie Food Forest map

·       hosting fresh fruit and vegetable share markets

·       constructing Urban Food Gardens for community centres

·       organising Seed Banks at community centres

·       organising community fruit and vegetable picking days

·       facilitating healthy food preparation workshops

 

Cheers

Bridgette Watts

Tassie Food Forest Project 

Co-ordinated by Urban Farming Tasmania  and sponsored by Colony 47 Inc

Supported by Bridgewater Community House, Deloraine Community House, Salvation Army, Launceston City Council, Sprout Tasmania, Eat Well Tasmania, NRM north, NRM Tamar, Understorey Network and University of Tasmania. 

News & Events

Thank you for your great support. Thanks to you this idea has grown from a box of apples to a thriving collective, weekly Market and many side projects. We would like to let you know about the latest news, events and projects that you can access in the following ways:

The Fresh Fruit, Veg & Art Share Market
12noon Mondays, Tasmanian College of the Arts, Launceston. This is a free community event and all are welcome. We are happy to accept donations of fresh fruit and vegetables. There are a few restrictions on cooked and processed foods which are detailed below.

*Special End of Winter Market*
25th August UTAS open day 10am- 2pm. We will hold the usual Monday Market on the Sunday instead of Monday. The first Great Seed & Seedling give way is on this day. We need your help to start growing these seedlings.

The Seed Bank is Open
This is a large box of vegetable seed where you can make free deposits and withdrawals. The focus is home grown and collected seeds. The bank has labels, small plastic bags and pens. A good resource for the great seedling give away.

The Great Seed & Seedling Giveaway
This first will be on the 25th August End of Winter Market for UTAS open day. Lets encourage people to plant and grow their own food. So start planting in toilet rolls and egg cartons, we need everyone growing for this event (raid the seed bank).

Backyard Fruit & Veg Photo Project
I am looking for the backyards of fruit and vegie growers You garden does not have to be fancy or perfect, I prefer if its not, I just want to meet you, know your story and take a few pics, cheers Bridgette

Public Fruit Preserves
Our jams, chutneys, relish and pastes were very popular this year and we hope to bring these back soon. We are looking for a commercial kitchen to prepare these in for next season. We hope then we can hold ‘Jamming sessions’ with great music and friends from the collective.

Conferences, fairs, festivals & events
We are always interested in attending these events. The next one is the National Students for Sustainability conference July 5-9th which happens to be in Tasmania. If you are keen to help with this event then let us know.

Now for the exciting stuff!
You may be aware we have become famous on the radio and in the newspaper

Due to this publicity and growth we have had meetings with both Launceston City Council and Tasmanian College of the Arts. These were not due to reports to the Council about food hygiene or anyone breaking legislation. The concerns were about trading, duty of care and the legality of foraging.

Trade or sharing, what is the difference?
We are a share market that accepts donations and allows people to take what they want. In the collective and at the Market there is NO sale, direct trade, barter or exchange between individuals. If we were to do these, then we would have requirements from council regulations.

Duty of Care in handling Fresh, Cooked & Processed Food
Although we have been told we have no requirements regarding council regulations, we still have a duty of care to the public. Basically this means a few limitations:

  • We can accept fruit, vegetables and freshly baked goods
  • We can not accept any hazardous foods such as meat, fish, seafood, diary, small goods, eggs etc
  • We also can not accept preserved, bottled or cooked foods which are prepared in a kitchen which has not had prior approval of the council

We would recommend the following free health and safety training to all members of the collective, its only takes 30 minutes and please email us a copy
http://www.imalert.com.au/foodsafety/training/welcome.php?sub=launceston

Public Fruit map and Foraging
We have recently put the public fruit map back online after receiving the following statement from the Launceston City Council:

‘The Launceston City Council encourages sustainability practices within the Northern Tasmanian community and has no objection to members of the public taking fruit or other produce from street trees or trees within the Council’s public reserves. However, the taking of fruit or other produce should only be done in locations where it is safe to do so, using methods which are also safe. Fruit and other produce should not be collected from roads or from trees by climbing or using ladders. The Council does not spray these trees with insecticides or pesticides, so care should be taken to ensure any fruit or produce collected is free from insects’.

Please check with your local council if you have concerns.