5 Nonprofits Sowing the Seeds of a Better Food System - Modern Farmer

5 Nonprofits Sowing the Seeds of a Better Food System

These organizations are doing the important work of preserving heirloom seeds and improving organic farming practices.

Nonprofits around the country are working to ensure access to heirloom, open-pollinated seeds for generations to come.
Photography Mazzam on Shutterstock.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Seed Savers Exchange[/mf_h2]

Stewards of one of the oldest and largest seed banks in North America, Seed Savers Exchange boasts a collection of over 20,000 heirloom varieties – including more than 1,000 heritage apple trees – many of which are available in their online catalog. This Iowa-based organization also hosts a giant online seed swap, where dues-paying members can exchange their favorite varieties. If membership isn’t for you, anyone is welcome to buy seeds.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Organic Seed Alliance[/mf_h2]

Many modern seed varieties are simply not well-suited to organic production. That’s why the Organic Seed Alliance actively promotes breeding organic-specific varieties. OSA also provides technical assistance to organic farmers on seed-related matters, and they are active participants in the fight to prevent transnational companies from gobbling up every last small and regional seed purveyor. While they support the preservation of heirloom crops, they also develop new seed varieties geared specifically for organic farmers, including the recent releases ‘Abundant Bloomsdale’ spinach and ‘Who Gets Kissed?’ sweet corn.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Seed Matters[/mf_h2]

Seed Matters is a special initiative from the Clif Bar Family Foundation. Managed by Allen Rosenfeld, the Foundation’s director of programs for food systems and economics, the organization’s mission is to promote public seed breeding and research – as opposed to corporate-backed research, which has dominated the field in recent years – and ensure that future seed development is focused squarely on the needs and interests of farmers.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Native Seeds/S.E.A.R.C.H.[/mf_h2]

Have a particular love for the Southwest? This is your group. in preserving agricultural biodiversity in the Southwest? This is the organization for you. Based in Tucson, AZ, Native Seeds/S.E.A.R.C.H. is dedicated to preserving agricultural biodiversity in its corner of the country. The group’s enormous seed library hosts a number of endangered and nearly extinct Native American seed varieties that were historically cultivated by desert tribes. Many of their seeds are suitable for planting in other regions, however, and are available for sale online and at retail garden centers.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]Southern Exposure Seed Exchange[/mf_h2]

SESE, helmed by famed plantswoman Ira Wallace, is to the southeast what Native Seeds/S.E.A.R.C.H. is to the southwest. Like its counterpart in the desert, SESE conserves, exchanges, and promotes traditional, locally-adapted varieties, many of which also grow well throughout the country, and are available through an extensive online catalog. Uniquely, this group is based on a commune in Virginia, whose members share in the work of preserving, growing, and distributing the seeds.

[mf_h2 align=”left” transform=”uppercase”]BONUS: Organic Farming Research Foundation[/mf_h2]

While technically not a seed saving organization, we felt it important to include the Organic Farming Research Foundation. OFRF is one of the only groups devoted entirely to high-level organic farming research – a necessity for advancing the industry. Based in the organic farming hotbed of Santa Cruz, California, the group provides grants to both academics and actual farmers throughout North America to conduct practical experiments that help make organic agriculture more efficient and productive. Crucially, they also take their message to Capitol Hill, where they lobby lawmakers to provide funding for the cause.

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