Monday, 20 May 2013

The New EU Seed Law

Will saving our own seeds and exchanging them with our neighboor soon be illegal ?
If the new EU Seed Law proposal becomes an actual law this may very well be the case very soon. Further it will cause an even more dramatic decline of bio diversity and seed varieties available to the home grower.

The following paragraph is quoted from this website: http://www.realseeds.co.uk/seedlaw.html

All ABOUT THE New EU Seed Law

Updated Thursday May 9th ...
Well, what a hectic fortnight. Everyone we know has been lobbying hard, and thanks to the hundreds of thousands of people who have been emailing and writing about this, there were some important last-minute changes to the proposed law.
While it is still a terrible law, it is less bad than the earlier drafts. This is only because so much pressure was brought to bear on them! We must remain vigilant, and fight for improvements to the law as it goes through the EU, and then is translated into UK laws. For now, here is a summary of the current situation. The law itself is linked at the bottom.
WHAT IS THIS LAW? On Monday May 6th a draconian new law was put before the European Commission, which creates new powers to classify and regulate all plant life anywhere in Europe.
The "Plant Reproductive Material Law" regulates all plants. It contains immediate restrictions on vegetables and woodland trees. (It also creates powers that can be used to restrict any other plants in the future, but the details of how this will work are left for later.)
Under the new law, it will immediately be illegal to grow, reproduce or trade any vegetable seed or tree that has not been tested and approved by a new "EU Plant Variety Agency", who will make a list of approved plants. Moreover, an annual fee must also be paid to the Agency to keep them on the list, and if not paid, they cannot be produced.
WHY IS THERE A NEW LAW?
Officially, it is to simplify and bring up to date lots of old laws , and 'increase consumer protection'.
In reality, it seems to be mostly about the globalised agribusiness seed industry needing new laws to cope with gene patents and plant patents, and to be able to register 'their' industrial varieties or genes safely and securely before selling them in large quantities to industrial farmers, who might otherwise save the seed and sell it or use it themselves without paying a royalty fee.
The needs of the millions of people who grow normal vegetables on a normal scale have been overlooked.
THERE WAS A FUSS ABOUT THIS- WHAT HAPPENED?
The early drafts of the law were badly written. They really did imply that people couldn't even swap their own saved seeds with their neighbours for free. (This may have been simply poor wording, or deliberate, it was not clear which.) And subsequent drafts got more restrictive, not less.
Following a huge outcry and intense lobbying from consumer groups, small-scale farmers, genebanks, and even some member-state governements, some last-minute changes were made, which have reduced the impact slightly. It is still a bad law, just not as bad as they initally proposed.
WHAT DOES THE LAW SAY?
The law starts from the premise that all vegetables, fruit and trees must be officially registered before they can be reproduced or distributed. This obviously is a major restriction on seed availability, as there are all sorts of costs in both time and money dealing with the bureaucracy of a central Plant Variety Agency. Then, after making that the basic rule, there are some exceptions made in limited cases:
  • Home gardeners will be permitted to save and swap unregistered seed without breaking the law.
  • Small organisations can grow and supply unregistered vegetable seed - but only if they have less than 10 employees
  • Seedbanks can grow unregistered seed without breaking the law (but they cannot give it to the public)
  • There might be easier (in an unspecified way) rules for large producers of seeds suitable for organic agriculture etc, in some (unspecified) future legislation - maybe.
SURELY THIS IS OK THEN?
No, not really. These concessions might be helpful, but are still limited. They are subject to all sorts of 'ifs' and 'buts' in the small print. And the small print hasn't been written yet, and in fact won't written until long after the law has been approved.
So we have no idea if they will survive into the final version in any useful form. Remember, they only made these changes after a huge public outcry - and given what they thought was a good idea to start with, our confidence in the process is not high.
And the rest of the law is still overly restrictive - there are all sorts of rules about labelling & sealing packets for example - and in the long run will make it much harder for people to get hold of good seeds they want to grow at home or for small scale sustainable agriculture.
For years the availability of freely reproducible open-pollinated seedsuitable for sustainable agriculture has been shrinking due to the seed laws, and this new law doesn't address the problem. It just considers the needs of the agri-tech industry and makes it easier for them to market their industrial seed on a big scale.
WHAT IS THE BASIC PROBLEM?
The real problem is having a starting point that all seeds are prohibited unless officially tested and registered, and then adding some small exceptions as an afterthought.
This is really back to front - testing and registration should be voluntary. Then some people (like massive industrial farmers) who might want the sort of seed that can pass certain types of test - they can choose to use the 'officially registered' seed.
And normal people would be free to choose freely what they want to grow from all the myriad of normal seed in the world.
There are also clauses that mean the above concessions could be removed or reduced at any time in the future without coming back to the Parliament for a vote.
NOW WHAT HAPPENS?
This is a starting point - it is a draft law, not the final thing. Next it must go to Parliament for modification or approval, so there is still the chance of changes for better or worse. All the competing and vested interests will try to change it for their own benefit.
And almost everyone involved - either as a lobbyist or a bureaucrat - is only thinking about the needs of industrial farmers, not small-scale agriculture - even though they have applied the law to both types of seeds. So we must all campaign for small farmers' and home growers' rights, to make sure only improvements are made!
WHAT DO WE WANT?
This law was written for the needs of the globalised farm-seed industry, who supply seed by the ton to industrial farmers. It should not apply at all to seed used by home gardeners and small market growers, who have very different needs.
Freely reproducible seeds are an inalienable part of our heritage. Listing and official certification of vegetable seeds might be helpful for industrial-scale farmers, but it should be a voluntary scheme that people can choose to use if they need it.
So we are calling for registration and testing to be voluntary for all non-GMO, non-patented, non-hybrid seed. That would fix all the problems with the law, while still allowing the giant agri-companies to protect their business the way they want.
But if that does not happen, if we must have a seed-registration system, then this law really needs improving - because allowing tiny organisations to supply seed outside the regulations is a good start, but it is not sufficient.
Only in this way will we have a broad supply of quality seed for the needs of home gardeners and small growers.

 

1) SIGN the petition(s)

There are several petitions organised for this. The biggest is the Arche Noah petition which you should sign here. 200000 signatures so far!
Another one is the English-language version of the Seed Sovereignty petition (there is one for each EU language, so the total numbers are lower for each.)
Please sign both and share these links.

2) CHECK OUT OUR FACEBOOK PAGE

We will post updates on our Facebook Page as we get more information.

EVEN MORE INFORMATION - and a warning

The law itself is linked below if you want to wade through it. But before you start, a very important warning:
You cannot just read the first 5 pages or so that are an 'executive summary', and think you know what this law is about. The executive summary is NOT what will become the law. It is the actual Articles themselves that become law, the Summary has no legal standing and is just tacked on as an aid to the public and legislators, it is supposed to give background information and set the proposed legislation in context so people know what is going on and why.
The problem with this law has always been that the Summary says lots of nice fluffy things about preserving biodiversity, simplifying legislation, making things easier etc etc - things we all would love - but the Articles of the law don't really have the promised effects. And the Summary is not what becomes the law.
So, be warned. By all means, read it yourself. But you have to pretty much ignore the Summary as that is not the Law, and does not reflect what is in the Law. The actual meat of it starts around about Page 25. Some of the more important articles are 2, 3, 14, and 36 but you do need to read all the rest as well to see how they fit together.
Official version of the Law as of May 6th is Here

NOTES TO EDITORS
  • "Proposal for a Plant Reproductive Material Law" was released on May 6th 2013
  • Law drafted by DG SANCO (consumer affairs), apparently some debate by DG AGRI & ENVI (agriculture & environment)
  • Executive Summary of Law does not truly reflect stricter reality of the actual articles in the law
  • Law as currently proposed will effectively kill off professional development of home-garden seeds in the EU
  • Huge public opposition: over 220,000 signatures to the Arche Noah petition
  • Media contact: Ben Gabel, The Real Seed Catalogue: ben@realseeds.co.uk
ABOUT THE REAL SEED CATALOGUE:
The Real Seed Catalogue ( www.realseeds.co.uk ) is a well-known DEFRA-registered seed supplier, based in Wales, that specialises in breeding and supplying vegetable seed specially suited to the needs of home gardeners. As a not-for-profit company dedicated to the needs of home gardeners, it is also one of the UK's premier seed-saving organisations, educating the public about seed saving and how to preserve their own heritage varieties of vegetables at home.
Find out more about the NEW Seed Law and take action here:
http://www.avaaz.org/en/monsanto_vs_mother_earth_loc/?fp

Our article in "The Ionian"

We recently had a chance to write an article about growing old varieties of grains in Greece for "The Ionian" magazine. It was published in the May issue of 2013.
You can read it here:
http://www.theionian.com/

Latest issue

Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Small scale home distilling of essential oils

Now that winter has come, I have eventually found some time to post a few pictures of  last summers essential oil distilling project.
With the help of wonderful volunteers we managed to do some steam distillation using our small copper still. We did quite a few plants like:
Chamomile
Seville orange peel
Orange blossom
Clary sage
Sage
Yarrow
Lavender 
and Roses

the raw material, here lavender



finely shredded orange peel

the equipment: our 5 litre copper distiller with narrow neck bottle to receive the hydrosol  and the essential oil that will drip from the distiller


The quantity of essential oil produced during one distillation various tremendously depending on the the plant that is being distilled, sometimes we get nothing (roses) or up to 10 ml (orange peel or lavender)

Hydrosol also known as flower water and is always produced during steam distillation as we do it. The best known hydrosols are rose water and orange blossom water. Other hydrosols are also quite nice and versatile such as lavender water.

Orange blossom ready to be distilled



 Hydrolsol with a thin layer of clary sage essential oil floating on top:




From the roses and orange blossom we did not get any essential oil, simply because we do not have sufficient quantities  of raw material and large enough equipment.

Essential oil of German chamomile and yarrow have a beautiful blue color due to a substance called azulene

photo courtesy of  Aida Povilaityte
They are unfortunately very viscous as well and stick to the walls of the distiller.

Here we distilled orange peel after a session of chamomile. What happened was that the orange oil which is well known for its solvent like properties disolved the chamomille oil stuck inside the distiller, so the first orange oil that came out was a gorgeous shade of blue because it was mixed with the chamomille.  The fragrance however was distinct citrus like.

photo courtesy of  Aida Povilaityte


We also made some beautifully scented body butters with real rose and jasmine fragrance.
We used the ancient technique of Enfleurage to capture the scent of the flowers with natural plant fats and oil such as coconut oil and shea butter.  Hopefully I will take some good photographs of this technique this coming season.


Winter time in Greece

Sunset over the Gulf of Ambrakia
A rather rare phenomenon- fog hanging over our fields
The town of Arta behind a wall of fog
Natural springs (our source of drinking water) overflowing from heavy rainfall
A bit further down stream - wild snow drops flowering next to the water stream
A place to feel like a water nymph of  Ancient Greek mythology
A plane tree in winter overgrown with moss and ferns







Saturday, 5 January 2013

Olive Harvest 2012/13

Our this years olive harvest got very much delayed due to excessive rainfall. But in the end we got them all picked although a considerable portion got damaged by frost and rain.

Lambros (5) picking Olives
A small variety of Olives for oil making
Beautiful Koroneiki Olives lying in golden evening sun
A surprisingly good crop of Kalamata olives




Wednesday, 5 December 2012

Winter vegetables

Winter vegetables are getting ready for harvest. During winter we mainly cultivate Crucifera vegetables, members of the cabbage family.

Broccoli
Cauliflower
 Winter sun on young cabbage
Asian greens like pak choy and tatsoi thrive in Greek winter and a  welcome and tasty alternative to the usual greens



Saturday, 27 October 2012

Amaranth Harvest in October

Amaranth is a highly nutritional pseudo grain from the ancient Aztec civilisation of  Mesoamerica.

Grain amaranth ready for harvest

cut off heads of amaranth