Open Pollinated Vegetable Seeds
open pollinated vegetable seeds
- Click for PriceNortherntool

Gilmour Gardening Extra Large Impulse Sprinkler, Model# 196XLB
With a unique, patented design, the Pattern Master gives you the freedom to customize the spray pattern you use on...
- Click for PriceNortherntool

Gilmour Gardening Large Coverage Impulse Sprinkler, Model# 199LMS
Heavy-duty sprinkler with extra-large head for 50% more water coverage, up to 8500 sq. ft. and 106ft. dia., full or...
- Click for PriceModCloth

Gardening a Lot of Attention Dress
This item was picked by you in our Be the Buyer Program and will be sold exclusively online at ModCloth!...
- Click for Pricefabric.com

Martha Stewart Crafts Gardening Stickers
Perfect for embellishing hand-made cards or scrapbook pages, paper projects, or add a little something extra to jazz up a...
- Click for PriceCooking.com

Everything You Can Do in the Garden Without Actually Gardening
The planning, planting, growing, and tending of a garden may be intimidating to the average person, but the pleasures of...
- Click for PriceCooking.com

Organic Gardening
Creating and maintaining a beautiful garden that is safe and natural is becoming increasingly popular as we begin to understand...

Why Use Survival Seeds to Grow Vegetables in Your Garden?
Main difference between non-hybrid and hybrid seeds is that you can collect the seeds from non-hybrid crops and use them for future planting, while hybrid seeds produce sterile vegetables that cannot reproduce from seeds. This is the reason why non-hybrid or open pollinated seeds are always used for survival seeds in survival seed bank kits.
If you are planning to grow vegetables and plant a garden for a food supply, you should use only survival seeds, non hybrid and open pollinated seeds. By using survival seeds, a large portion of the food for you and your family can come from your garden.
Another benefit of using non hybrid survival seeds is saving money: you will be able to collect the seeds from the vegetables you have grown, and you won’t need to by seeds the following year!
Survival Seeds Facts:
- Survival seeds are all non hybrid and/or open pollinated varieties
- You buy survival seeds only once
- You will save money by using survival seeds for planting vegetables and then collecting seeds from the vegetables you have grown
- Saving seeds from vegetables is an easy task anyone can master
- Vegetables from non hybrid seeds have better taste, color and texture then the ones grown from hybrid seeds (bought at the supermarket)
- Survival seed bank can provide generations of vegetables if survival seeds are collected from the vegetables
Survival seeds are not just ordinary garden seeds. These seeds could be your safety and protection against future food crises, climate disasters like floods or winds, or a solution to put food on the table in economic break downs.
Unfortunately, on today’s market, majority of fruits and vegetables we can buy are non-organic or hybrid origin. Hybrid vegetables have better „shelf life“ (last longer in the supermarkets) but don’t taste as good as home grown vegetables do. By using non hybrid survival seeds to grow your own vegetables supply, you can control the quality of food you and your family are eating every day.
At the same time, survival seeds make a readiness and precaution plan for the unknown future and a safe judgment which shows that we care about the food we eat today!
About the Author
When the going gets tough… you’ll want to have a Survival Seed Bank full of seeds which will not only produce outstanding nutritional vegetables but will allow you to grow your food year after year using Survival Seeds !
| | Fresh Food from Small Spaces: The Square-Inch Gardener’s Guide to Year-Round Growing, Fermenting, and Sprouting $11.00 Books on container gardening have been wildly popular with urban and suburban readers, but until now, there has been no comprehensive “how-to” guide for growing fresh food in the absence of open land. Fresh Food from Small Spaces fills the gap as a practical, comprehensive, and downright fun guide to growing food in small spaces. It provides readers with the knowledge and skills necessary to produ… |
| | Backyard Harvest: A year-round guide to growing fruit and vegetables $11.61 From sowing and planting to growing and harvesting, Backyard Harvest covers storing, freezing, and preserving tips so that you can enjoy your garden’s bounty into the winter months and throughout the early-spring gap when little is ready to harvest…. |
| | How to Grow More Vegetables, Eighth Edition: (and Fruits, Nuts, Berries, Grains, and Other Crops) Than You Ever Thought Possible on Less Land Than You … (And Fruits, Nuts, Berries, Grains,) $9.73 Decades before the terms “eco-friendly” and “sustainable growing” entered the vernacular, How to Grow More Vegetables demonstrated that small-scale, high-yield, all-organic gardening methods could yield bountiful crops over multiple growing cycles using minimal resources in a suburban environment. The concept that John Jeavons and the team at Ecology Action launched more than 40 years ago … |
| | … |
Other articles you might like;
Filed under Sustainable Seeds by on Feb 21st, 2009. ![]()



Leave a Comment