Thread: Organic seeds
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Old 29-07-2009, 06:01 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Martin Brown Martin Brown is offline
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Default Organic seeds

Kate Brown wrote:
On Wed, 29 Jul 2009, Martin Brown wrote
echinosum wrote:
Ben Short;858424 Wrote:
Does anyone know what the difference is between a organic seed and a
normal seed?
The same as the difference between an "organic" apple and another
apple, as found on the greengrocer's shelf, ie, the way in which it was
produced. Growing plants from an "organic" seed does not result in the
produce being organic unless the culture is also organic. On the other
hand, I expect that much "organic" produce may well be grown from seeds
whose culture was not "organic".


The amount of residue in the seeds is miniscule and may be important
to keeping the seeds viable for lng term storage.

I hate the term "organic" for this. Organic previously meant something
quite different, and is still used in that sense. The French term
"biodynamic" is more better.


That has connotations of lunacy - quite literally.

If you want a rational basis for agriculture then minimum inputs is
the way to go. Organic(TM) hair shirt growing may be OK for feeding
the rich worried well but it cannot generate sufficient yields to feed
everyone.


We throw away two-thirds of the food we produce in the west. If we


You may do. I certainly don't. I occasionally fail to finish eating the
odd 40p reduced loaf before it goes mouldy in hot weather and that is
about it. Much of the fruit I buy from supermarkets is reduced and on
its sell by date (and as a result more or less ready to eat). I refuse
point blank to pay top whack for something that was harvested unripe and
chosen for its regular size and shelf life.

I generally support smaller local producers for veg that I cannot grow
but supermarkets are handy. My raspberries are just about finished.
Blueberries about to crop and far too many gooseberries to shake a stick
at. Looks like there will be a bumper crop of brambles this year too.

solved the problem of waste we wouldn't need technological solutions to
grow more.


Yes we will. There are a very large number of people starving in the
third world and without sensible agricultural practices they will
continue to starve, subsist and wreck the land they try to live on.

Organic(TM) is a fad pandering to the "worried well" that allows
supermarkets to charge a super premium price for vastly overpackaged
produce with no convincing benefits whatsoever. Go look at the shelves.

Regards,
Martin Brown