Posts by Nick
Soil microbes in organic vegetable production: New insights from pyrosequencing
The response of soil microbial communities to organic and conventional fertilization Principle Investigators: Dr. Karen Garrett, Dr. Ari Jumpponen, Dr. Megan Kennelly Collaborators: Lorena Gomez-Montano, M.S. View/download full report in PDF format Summary: Technologies for studying the composition of microbial communities are developing at a very rapid pace. A challenge for agriculture is how to…
Read MorePotential of organic hogs as a tool for post-harvest orchard floor sanitation and pest management
Graduate Student Final Report – Ceres Trust Research Grant View/Download in Microsoft Word Format Graduate Student: Krista Buehrer, Michigan State University, Department of Entomology Major Professor: Dr. Matthew Grieshop, Michigan State University Department of Entomology Results The study was conducted in organic apple and cherry orchards in Leelanau County, Northport, MI. The orchards were comprised of mature trees.…
Read MoreOrganic Research and Outreach in the North Central Region – May 2013
Primary Author: Jim Riddle Download this report as a PDF. Print copies of this report are available by contacting The Ceres Trust. Forward Steady growth in the organic food and farming sector stimulated by enactment and implementation of the 1990 Organic Foods Production Act has been supported and encouraged by state and federal agencies and…
Read More2012 Organic Research Initiative Grantees
Iowa State University “Improving Organic No-Till Systems for Enhanced Soil Quality and Weed Management in Organic Vegetable and Grain/Forage Systems.” Kathleen Delate, Principal Investigator. Three years. $176,595. Kansas State University “New Rootstock Systems for Disease Management and Increased Productivity in Organic Tomato: Understanding Effects on the Rhizobiome.” Karen Garrett, Principal Investigator. Three years. $179,960. Purdue…
Read More2013 Graduate Student Organic Research Grants
The Ceres Trust Organic Research Initiative Request for Applications Introduction The Ceres Trust, a privately-administered charitable trust based in the Midwest, has as its main focus the support and promotion of organic and sustainable agriculture. This Request for Applications is provided for the 2013 Graduate Student Organic Research Grants Program. This is the fourth year…
Read MoreRequest for Applications 2012
Organic Research Initiative The Ceres Trust Introduction The Ceres Trust, a privately administered charitable trust based in the Midwest, has as its main focus the support and promotion of organic and sustainable agriculture. This request for applications is provided for the fourth year of our competitive Organic Research Initiative (ORI) program. Our commitment to ORI grantmaking in 2012…
Read MoreThe Story of How Seed Savers Exchange Seeds Ended up at Svalbard
This is Part II of the talk that Kent Whealy, co-founder of the Seed Savers Exchange in Decorah, Iowa, gave at the 2010 Land Institute’s 32nd annual Prairie Festival in Salina, Kansas on September 26th, 2010…
And now, I would like to talk to you about what Wes (Jackson) would call the area of my current passion. How many of you have heard about the Svalbard Global Seed Vault that has been constructed above the Arctic Circle north of Norway? Raise your hands. I am vitally concerned right now because Seed Savers Members’ Seed Collection is being systematically taken away from its Members…
Read MoreThe Documenting of Heritage Apples
During the time that I have with you today, I want to first describe everything that was involved as I put the Historic Orchard into place at Seed Savers, which today contains about 700 varieties of pre-1900 apples. Those efforts more than two decades ago have led to the major six-volume book I am currently editing which will document more than 13,000 varieties of apples mentioned in U.S. literature during the last two centuries, and which will also be illustrated with 3,500 watercolors of those apples. Then I want to briefly describe some of the foundation work I am currently involve in as a trustee of the Ceres Trust, which is mainly attempting to empower organic agriculture.
Read MoreComparative Growouts, and Identifying the True Heirlooms in Heritage Farm’s Collections
I want to welcome all of you to Seed Savers’ 17th annual Campout Convention. Each summer, on this next-to-last full weekend in July, our members gather at Heritage Farm for this special celebration, which is partly a convention and partly a reunion of old friends.
Read MoreLettuce Growout at Heritage Farm
The seed collections at Heritage Farm have continued to grow rapidly in recent years, and now contain more than 18,000 total varieties. At the end of 1996, our collections included: 3,511 beans; 645 corns; 193 cucumbers; 136 eggplants; 187 garlics; 836 lettuces; 426 melons; 934 peas; 1,213 peppers; 1,016 squash; 156 sunflowers; 4,090 tomatoes; 226 watermelons; and smaller amounts of 67 other vegetable crops. At that same time, Heritage Farm’s Historic Orchard also contained 667 apples and 163 grapes. And all of these figures were before receiving two large shipments of seeds during the spring of 1997 from the Vavilov Institute in St. Petersburg, Russia, which contained samples of traditional varieties from the three collecting expeditions last summer to the Aral Sea in Kazakhstan, Russia’s Volga Valley, and the Carpathian Mountains in western Ukraine.
During a typical summer at Heritage Farm, we normally grow about 2,000 varieties for seed, usually about 10% of our major collections: 300 tomatoes; 300 beans; 125 peppers (under screen cages); etc. In 1989 we began taking documentary photographs and collecting data on most of the varieties being grown in the preservation gardens at Heritage Farm. Each photo is taken on a 1″ grid, and the content varies depending on the crop being photographed. For instance, documentary photos of tomatoes include a typical leaf, four views of the fruit (stem side, blossom side, side view, and a cut fruit showing the internal structure), and a label with the variety’s name and SSE #. Photos of peppers include a branch of leaves with an immature fruit, three views of the mature fruit (whole fruit, fruit cut lengthwise, and a cross section), plus name label. And so on.
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