Heirloom Gardening

Exactly what an heirloom plant is can mean different things to different people. Purists will say a variety can be no younger than 60 years old, because that would ensure its origins are from before WWII, when modern agriculture emerged and varieties began to be patented. At the very least, an heirloom variety is one that is free from patents and intellectual property rights, non-genetically manipulated and not a hybrid variety. It is always possible to save the seeds from heirloom plants, and use them to grow an identical plant. In other words, you must be able to both legally and practically save them from one year to the next and pass these seeds onto your children like an heirloom. Since new varieties can be produced today but using traditional techniques, many people refer to these as modern heirloom varieties and consider them just as special as the older original heirloom varieties.

Before WWII if you wanted for example, to grow a cucumber, chances are what you would do is ask around and find someone who was growing a nice tasting cucumber and get some seeds from them. You could then save some seeds from your plants, and share them with others. If you were looking for something special and couldn’t find it anywhere else, you might create it yourself by taking two different cucumbers and cross pollinating them, thus creating a new heirloom variety.

Nowadays, if you want to grow a cucumber, chances are you would go to a garden center and buy a package of cucumber seeds. Odds are that the seeds you buy will be both patented and a hybrid variety, because these are more profitable for seed companies to sell as they can control the distribution of them. It may be that you grow excellent cucumbers with these seeds, so why should you care if they are an heirloom variety or not?

Hybrid varieties are made by combining the genetic material from two plants in a laboratory or factory, and the seeds produced by these plants are not genetically stable. In general, if you save the seeds from these plants and replant them, they will tend to revert closer to one of their original parent plants with each successive generation. Seed companies are generally able to keep the identities of the parent plants a secret, and so it is not possible for a competitor or home gardener to exactly copy the process of producing the seeds.

Let’s have a look at some of the reasons why many home gardeners choose to grow commercial seeds.

Seed companies are very adept at marketing their products and making empty claims that their F1 hybrids (common hybrids) are inherently higher quality. Often seed companies claim better taste, disease resistance or improved yields in a wider variety of climates. Much of the marketing warns you not to take a chance. You are going to spend all summer toiling in your garden, so don’t risk growing anything else.

It is true that every variety of plant, F1 hybrids included, can have unique or desirable characteristics. It’s not always true that hybrids are the only varieties with these characteristics or that heirloom varieties don’t have their own special qualities that you can’t find in hybrids. In reality, most of the characteristics seed companies are looking for in a variety have to do with long storage, ease of shipping, uniform appearance of the fruit, and so on. These characteristics are rarely interesting for the home gardener, and frequently don’t include tasting good, despite what their marketing says.

In some parts of the world heirloom varieties of plants are illegal. For example in Europe there was the 1945 treaty of Paris, which has evolved into to the current Common Agricultural Policy (CAP). The secret of the success of the CAP lies in it’s obscurity, and few people really understand how it works or what it does, and so it simply goes unchallenged. A very important part of how it functions lies in allowed seed lists. Each country maintains it’s own lists of varieties of seeds that are allowed to be used for food production and seeds to be sold to home gardeners. In theory, the purpose of these lists are to provide ‘genetically pure’ food, that has been tested for safety. Initially, it was these lists that saved Europe from genetically modified (GM) varieties, because they simply weren’t on the lists yet. In practice, the procedure for adding and taking seeds off these lists is very political. Very few heirloom varieties are on these lists, and the very fact these lists exist all but rules out the possibility of someone developing a new variety and selling it, unless you are a powerful food company. There is no credible testing for safety when adding new varieties, and there are virtually no known safety issues that they would be testing for anyway. Virtually all of the varieties on these lists are patented and the majority are hybrids. The purpose of these lists are to protect patent holders from ‘unfair competition’ from unpateneted varieties.

Most people don’t realize the huge number of heirloom varieties available, or just how special and exciting they are. For example, there are about 4000 different kinds of known tomatoes, of which about 1000 are thought to be ‘interesting’. It’s true many of them are red, but there are also yellow, green, white and purple ones. There are striped tomatoes, and tomatoes that grow hollow so you can stuff them. Some are as small as a pea, and some grow to more than 2Kg. They all taste a little different, and most are really delicious. You will never look at a store bought tomato in the same way again, after you have had one of these. It’s the same for virtually all kinds of fruits and vegetables, there are an unbelievable number of different varieties to choose from. There is particular interest now in so called ‘antique apples’. You will never want to eat an apple from the store again, after you have tasted an antique apple, they are so unbelievably good.

Okay, I hear you say, you still aren’t convinced. If you want some excuses for not growing heirlooms, here are some common ones. You want the convenience of going to the garden store and buying a package of seeds. You aren’t going to save the seeds anyway, so you don’t care if they are patented or hybrid. There is a particular trait in some hybrid variety that you want, you think it tastes good, you know it will grow in your garden and you don’t want to take a chance or go to the hassle of locating or buying an heirloom variety. You certainly don’t want to grow anything weird. So what? What does it matter? What does a package of seeds cost anyway?

The sad fact is that large seed and food companies are winning, and most people are using these excuses. So successful are these companies in fact, that by some estimates 70% of the varieties grown before WWII don’t exist anymore. They are gone and will never come back. More are disappearing every year. They are gone simply because no one bothered to grow them in their garden and keep the seeds from one year to the next. They are gone because the companies that sold these varieties couldn’t compete with the convenience of being able to go to the garden center and buy a package of commercial seeds. This is our genetic heritage, that fed many generations of our ancestors. It represents centuries of home gardeners and farmers creating varieties that tasted good to them, and they wanted to eat. It’s as much a catastrophe as losing the world’s rainforests, and the species contained within them, and few people realize it’s happening. By hunting out heirloom varieties, saving and trading seeds with others, you can do your part in saving the genetic resources we have left.

7 Replies to “Heirloom Gardening”

  1. Hi Johanna,

    Thanks for the comment!

    I know the problem well of not knowing if a plant is really heirloom!

    As far as seeds go, on the front page of this blog http://bifurcatedcarrots.eu there are some seed companies listed, and they only sell heirloom seeds. These companies are mostly for fruit and vegetable seeds, but they have a few other plants. The Seed Savers Exchange, is also a great resource for heirloom fruit and vegetable seeds.

    Most members of the Seed Savers Exchange also have private collections not listed in the catalog. If you become a member, and get to know a few of these people, they may be able to help put you in touch with others that have the kinds of plants you are looking for in their own garden. When you become a member, they will send you a list of phone numbers of other members in your area. Just pick up the phone and give these people a call.

    Otherwise, the best thing to do is look for nurseries that specialize in heirloom varieties and don’t sell anything else. I suspect you knew this already…

    I hope this helps, but anyway all the best wishes for your business and your hunt for plants!

  2. Hello,

    I am very excited to find this wonderful article. It really hits home, and it’s a shame that more people aren’t aware of the tactics employed by these large food and seed companies. I am a huge supporter of “heirloom” varieties, and would love to know of any places that are selling them. For the past 2 years I have been trying to start a small plant business. The biggest obstacle I have encountered has been finding plants that I know ‘for certain’ are not protected. Let me tell you, this is no small task, I spend hour upon hour online and on the phone trying to find out a plants “legal status”. A lot of the nurseries that are more than happy to sell me a plant, become somewhat beligerant when I mention that I want to reproduce what I’m looking to buy, and need to know if its “protected”. It is VERY frustrating. I want to thank you for bringing this issue to light, hopefully more people will become interested in preserving what is left of our heirloom varieties, so maybe our great-great granchildren will be able to enjoy them.
    Kind Regards, Johanna

  3. What happens if you mix a patch of heirloom seeds with those that are organic )specificically tomatoe) ? And another question…can you plant cantaloupe, honeydew, and watermelon adjacent to eachother in a large patch?

  4. PS: Also what is the composition of the seeds even if the crop is successful? Can you keep the seeds for the next crop?

  5. Hi Linda,

    Thanks for the comment, and it’s great you are interested in growing fruits and vegetables, and these are good questions.

    As long as you do not intend to save your own seeds for regrowing, you can plant anything next to each other you want. You can never significantly change a plant by growing it near another one.

    Sometimes plants can give each other diseases, like you should never grow potatoes next to tomatoes, but this is a little complicated and too much to explain here.

    In any case, you never have to worry about growing plants next to each other if they are the same kind. For example you can grow as many tomatoes next to each other as you want, or as many melons next to each other as you want.

    If you are going to save your own seeds to replant, it can get a little complicated. Sometimes plants cross pollinate with each other, and when this happens normally it’s a bad thing and the seeds are not good for replanting.

    Tomatoes are very easy to save seeds for regrowing. They do not normally cross pollinate with nearby plants, so you can grow different tomatoes next to each other and still save seeds. You can only save seeds from heirloom or ‘open pollinated’ (or OP) plants! If you are not sure about this, the plant is probably not suitable for saving seeds.

    To save seeds from a tomato you can just take the seeds from a tomato that is allowed to get fully ripe on the plant and spread them out on a paper towel or coffee filter to dry. If you want to go to a little more trouble, you can also ferment the seeds and I made a post about this here:

    http://www.patnsteph.net/weblog/?p=7

    For melons it’s a lot more complicated. cantaloupe and honeydew will certainly cross with each other, but watermelon is something different. You can tell this by looking at the Latin names of these plants, which is sometimes printed on the packet of seeds. Watermelon is Citrullus lanatus and cantaloupe and honeydew are Cucumis melo. Again this can get a little bit complicated, but normally plants with the same Latin name will cross pollinate with each other, and those with different Latin names will not. There are some exceptions however.

    Good beginners plants for saving seeds from are peas, beans, tomatoes and lettuce. As long as you grow heirloom or OP varieties, you can just save seeds from these plants, because they don’t normally cross pollinate much.

    If you want to read more, have a look at this post:

    http://www.patnsteph.net/weblog/?p=237

    If you’re ready to read even more, have a look at this:

    http://www.seedambassadors.org/wp/?p=359

    Please come back and ask more questions! Growing your own vegetables and saving your own seeds can be a lot of fun, and I’d love to help you out if I can.

Leave a Reply

Anonymous comments are welcome, but it's still nice if you leave a name so we have something to call you. Name, Email and Website fields are all optional.

Pretty much anything goes except spam, off-topic comments and attempts to intimidate others. Very short comments that don't show creative thought, or contribute significantly to the discussion, may be considered spam.

Most comments are automatically approved. If you don't see your comment within 24 hours please get in touch.

Cookies must be enabled in your browser to leave a comment, because we use them to verify you aren't a robot.