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The LocalScale Seed Exchange Project

Producing and Exchanging Organic Seeds Locally

autonomy and resilience

This content is provided in partnership with DYISEEDS.

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Why produce your own Seeds?

Producing your seeds will give our local communities greater autonomy.

Producing seeds contributes towards maintaining a common heritage that has been developed over countless generations and that is fast disappearing; and it is an act of civil disobedience against increasingly restrictive laws that enable the big seed companies to gain total control over this source of life.

The monopoly of agro-industry in a standardized and globalised market has led to the destruction of thousand-year old agricultural systems that enabled generations to feed themselves. There used to exist hundreds of thousands of vegetable species across the planet, but today they face an accelerated process of extinction and the world's food relies on an increasingly limited number of plant species. Each region, each valley, used to have its own varieties adapted to local conditions. Exchange between farmers was part of life. Varieties travelled. Industrial agriculture, on the other hand, needs "homogenous" and "stable" varieties that will produce uniform vegetables with a long shelf life. The very opposite of the selection criteria used by farmers who developed "populations" rich in diversity and with the faculty to adapt, to evolve and to resist to changing local constraints. Most plant diseases are today provoked by industrial agriculture. The monocultures at the heart of oversimplified and mechanised agrarian systems bring about irreversible genetic erosion that will only lead to famine in the future. They are an insult to the boundless ingenuity of generations of farmers.

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How to exchange your seeds

Exchanging your seeds will easily increase diversification of what you grow.

This project originated from our partnership with Les Greniers d'Abondance, and our realization that one of the pathways to local resilience, was diversifying cultivated varieties and developing automomy in seeds. The 4th section of the research paper called "Achieving Food System Resilience" goes over this topic in details.

Producing seeds contributes towards maintaining a common heritage that has been developed over countless generations and that is fast disappearing; and it is an act of civil disobedience against increasingly restrictive laws that enable the big seed companies to gain total control over this source of life.

The LocalScale Seed Exchange System provides a way for community members to list and exchange seeds locally against digital tokens of their regenerative local currency.

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75%
Percent of plant genetic diversity lost over the past century
90%
Percent of crop varieties have become extinct over the past century
75%
Percent of the world's food coming from only 12 plant

Getting Started with the LocalScale Seed Exchange System

How we work

Here are the steps to start using the LocalScale Seed Exchange System.

1


Join LocalScale (it's free)

This is step 1

2


Activate your blockchain account

This is step 2

3


Start listing your seeds

This is step 3

4


Get local tokens and exchange against seeds

This is step 4

yeah!

Anyone who wants to produce seeds should have a general understanding of botany, the science of plants. Plants are at present classified according to the anatomy of their flowers, their reproductive organs and their fruit. They are classified by their Latin names. Using Latin names ensures precise classification, whereas using everyday language can lead to confusion. Acquiring this knowledge will help you to use the cultivation methods best adapted for seed production and avoid unwanted cross-pollination.

Botanical Classification

Watch this video on Botanical Classification

Technical and theoritical tools on organic seed production

pragmatic time

Some of the things you can do with Seeds on LocalScale.

ISOLATION TECHNIQUES

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WHAT IS A SEED?

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PRODUCTION OF BEAN

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PRODUCTION OF BEETROOT

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PRODUCTION OF BROAD BEAN

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PRODUCTION OF BROCCOLI

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PRODUCTION OF CABBAGE

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PRODUCTION OF CARDOON

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PRODUCTION OF CARROT

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PRODUCTION OF CAULIFLOWER

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PRODUCTION OF CELERY

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PRODUCTION OF CHARD

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PRODUCTION OF CHICORY

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PRODUCTION OF CORN

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PRODUCTION OF CORN SALAD

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PRODUCTION OF CUCUMBER

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PRODUCTION OF FENNEL

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PRODUCTION OF HOT PEPPER

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PRODUCTION OF KALE

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PRODUCTION OF KOHLRABI

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PRODUCTION OF LEEK

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PRODUCTION OF LETTUCE

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PRODUCTION OF MELON

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PRODUCTION OF ONION

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PRODUCTION OF PARSNIP

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PRODUCTION OF PEA

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PRODUCTION OF PEPPER

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PRODUCTION OF RADISH

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PRODUCTION OF SPINACH

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PRODUCTION OF SQUASH

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PRODUCTION OF SUNFLOWER

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PRODUCTION OF TOMATO

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PRODUCTION OF TURNIP

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PRODUCTION OF WATERMELON

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PRODUCTION OF ZUCCHINI

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Try seed collaborative variety trials with our partner Seedlinked

From university and extension variety trials, to early-stage collaborative breeding projects, to products at the end of the breeding pipeline facing their final tests and getting ready for launch, SeedLinked has game-changing tools to incorporate into your trialing program.

Shop seeds

Buy organic seeds optimized for your soil and climate

Run variety trials

Reduce costs in your trialing program

Join a trial

Grow new and exciting varieties before they are released commercially