How to Organize a Community Seed Swap
Host a seed swap in your area to connect gardeners and help everyone learn more about gardening in your region.
Jan. 13, 2009
By Tabitha Alterman
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At local seed exchanges, you can give and receive hard-to-find and unusual garden seeds and plants, such as rare heirloom vegetables. You can also save money that you would have spent on more common, trusty-dusty plants like beefsteak tomatoes.
MATTHEW T. STALLBAUMER
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Have you ever participated in a community seed swap? If not, you’re missing out on a great gardening resource — and a ton of fun, too. There are lots of benefits to swapping seeds with neighbors, and you can read more about them in my earlier article, Swap Seeds This Season.
So now, how about some step-by-step instructions for organizing a seed swap of your own? If you already know other gardeners in your area, you’re well on your way to setting up a fun event that will get everyone in your neighborhood started down the path to Master Gardener!
1. Choose a time and place. Depending on how many people you think may attend, it might be coziest to host the seed/plant swap in someone’s home or garden. (Reserve tables, chairs and tents, too, if necessary.) Or, if you expect to draw a larger crowd, look for free spaces you can reserve, such as a public library meeting room or a church basement.
2. Publicize your seed swap. A good place to start is by notifying local gardening groups and botanic gardens, and you can also reach interested people through classified ads, grocery cooperative newsletters, community bulletin boards and chamber of commerce calendars. We can help you publicize your seed swap, too! Post your event in our online event calendar or learn about how we can e-mail Mother Earth News readers in your area to notify them of your community seed swap.
3. Invite speakers. Contact your local gardening groups to find experts who know how to save different kinds of seeds, and can get folks fired up about why to save and share seeds. Extension agents also can give great tips on gardening in your specific region. Another excellent discussion topic would be about how to start seeds and transplant new seedlings.
4. Request seed donations from local gardeners or seed companies in advance, to bolster the offerings that people will bring.
5. Print off some handy articles from MotherEarthNews.com about seed-saving and other gardening techniques to distribute to the gardeners who attend your seed swap. (You have our permission!) You can search our complete gardening archive, or check out of some of these editors’ picks: