
Ranch Operations
Farm Management Team
Behind each seed packet in the Adesco library is a story spanning continents and centuries. We explore why saving these varieties is an act of cultural resistance.
Heritage seeds carry more than genetic information — they carry culture, history, and the agricultural wisdom of generations. Each variety in the Adesco Cultural Seeds Library was selected because it represents a food tradition that has been at risk of disappearing, either through commercial seed consolidation or the displacement of the communities that cultivated it.
A heritage or heirloom seed is an open-pollinated variety that has been saved and passed down for at least 50 years, often much longer. Unlike commercial hybrid seeds, heirlooms can be saved from season to season without loss of the plant's defining characteristics. This makes them particularly valuable for communities that cannot afford to purchase new seeds every year.
Adesco's seed library currently holds over 80 varieties, including African leafy greens, drought-resistant legumes, and heritage grains brought to Canada by immigrant farming families. Community members can borrow seeds each spring, grow them out, and return a portion of the harvest as saved seeds — keeping the library living and expanding.
In a food system dominated by a handful of multinational seed corporations, choosing to grow and save heritage varieties is a political act as much as an agricultural one. It is a declaration that the knowledge, flavours, and farming practices of marginalized communities have value — and that they will not be erased by the homogenizing forces of industrial agriculture.
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