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Seeds of Change Seed Give-away and Dixon Seed Exchange form an Alliance
![]() ![]() This year we also had an informal potluck dinner after the seed give-away where many participants shared special dishes they had brought from home. We swapped gardening advice and stories about planting in New Mexico and its unique challenges. It was a successful event and I believe the 75 or so participants went home excited to start planting their gardens. After the event, Adam Mackie from the Dixon Seed Exchange happily filled his pick-up truck with the unclaimed seed and took it up to Dixon. See below the description of Dixon's yearly event. Dixon Community Seed Exchange is now in its fourth year. The first year. we offered exclusively home grown seed and plant material, and five seed-savers brought their collections, with many more contributing a variety or two. Shortly before the second event, Adam, the organiser, ran into Emily Skelton and Erica Renaud, and we talked about distributing Seeds of Change surplus and #2 grade seed. Since then, each year Adam has taken a truckload of seeds to Dixon, and the Exchange is pleased to offer them to all participants, 300 in 2007! The Exchange is delighted to be able to encourage so many in Northern New Mexico to grow a little more, and to try new varieties and crops. As the Seeds of Change seeds act as a crowd draw, they help us attract dyed-in-the-wool seed-savers to an event that has now become a small festival. The seed-savers arrive one by one, some with organised index boxes of labelled envelopes, others with cartons of screwtop jars jumbled together, one with a huge gourd brim-full of smaller dry gourds, another with a tiny handful of four-o'clock seed. Someone else arrives embracing a dozen houseplants. Another a bucket of Jerusalem artichokes. A tray of immaculately cleaned garlic chive plants. Another asks if it is OK to offer a basket of Fava beans that have been grown for generations in Truchas, New Mexico. Is this OK? You bet it is OK. ![]() Over the years, we have seen some spectacular varieties, unavailable from any commercial source. The Basque Espelette pepper, white, yellow and blue meal corns from Acoma, Greeley onions, Taos pueblo red beans, local chile, Penasco short season corn, Truchas Fava, Medanales bolitos, sea-kale, the San Juan melon. Outside, the Dixon Elementary Cheerleaders are selling frito pies (made with local chile) and cup cakes as fast as they can. A musician plays, and instead of accepting tips, offers to share his Ojo Sarco posole corn. We never know what will show each year, but the surprises are always pleasant. The Seed Exchange is very grateful to Seeds of Change for donating its seed each year, and pleased to help the company extend its outreach to the community. The Seed Exchange Numbers 6000 little bags and envelopes, 350 or so varieties, 300 participants, 10 volunteers, 4 years, and free. Advance Notice The 5th Annual Dixon Community Seed Exchange is (tentatively) scheduled for April 13th, 2008.
Emily Skelton
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