Starting an Urban Homestead? Get a few Free Seed Catalogs
May 24th, 2011If you’re interested in starting an urban homestead, catalogs for heirloom vegetable seeds will be a regular part of your print diet. There are many kinds of free seed catalogs available – and you should grab as many as you can.
Talk to a few of your neighbors who have been bitten by the gardening bug. Not only will their enthusiasm be contagious, but they’ll probably be willing to share a few free seed catalogs with you. They could probably give you advice as to where you can find free seed catalogs of your own – local home and garden shops, gardening co-ops, grocery stores, and so on. Many free catalogs for heirloom vegetable seeds can be downloaded from the Web, or ordered from seed merchants via e-mail.
Getting a few free heirloom vegetable seeds is a good way to start an urban homestead. An increasing number of urban dwellers are growing at least some of what they eat. Vegetable and herb gardens are springing up in many cities. Chicken farms are becoming increasingly common.
The best way to build a self-supporting farm of any size is to select non-hybrid, non-GMO heirloom bulk seeds. Heirloom vegetable seeds are preserved in their purity from a time prior to widespread use of pesticides and herbicides, heirloom bulk seeds aren’t the product of genetic tinkering by some well-meaning corporate scientist. They can be collected and re-used for generations without diminished yield or nutritional benefit. And, most importantly, they grow into food that actually tastes like food, with full-bodied flavor, delectable texture, and full-spectrum nutritional benefits.
What free heirloom seeds should you select? Well, the easiest answer would be “All of them” – vegetables and fruits of all kinds and colors. In terms of nutritional density – protein and fiber content in particular – beans are hard to beat for someone looking to build up a supply of cheap bean seeds. Cultivated for millennia in the Western Hemisphere, and even used by some Indian cultures as currency, beans are a low-fuss, high-yield food source. They are inexpensive, easy to grow, simple to store, and hard to mess up even by the least talented cook. All varieties of beans – from pintos to navy beans, from green beans to the much-underappreciated lima — can be prepared in delicious, colorful meals. Planting beans next to other garden staples such as squash and corn – which are also good choices for your bulk seeds collection — will get an urban homestead off on a good start.
Next time you’re at the local farmer’s market, or chatting with a friend who’s a gardening enthusiast, ask about any heirloom vegetable seeds that might be available for free. The chances are pretty good that you’ll find somebody interested in helping you take the first steps toward food independence.