Heirloom Garden
The vegetables, fruit, herbs and flowers raised in the Watkins Mill garden are varieties that were available prior to 1880. Planted in a combination of raised beds and open plots of vegetables surrounded by herb and flower borders, the garden is based on descriptions of the Watkins garden and gardening practices in use in Clay County during the 1870s.
Today many of
the world's food plants are disappearing, including
vegetables, grains and fruit varieties. Some 70 percent
of the world's major food plants have already been
lost. Because modern agriculture requires high yield,
uniform plants, the genetic base of the world's food plants
has been greatly reduced. This has created reliable
crops but has left agriculture dependent on a few, closely
related varieties of each crop. When a blight or
disease does get into one of these crops, it can spread
rapidly, causing widespread crop failure. One of the
best known is the blight-induced failure of the Irish potato
crop in the 1840s. The result was the Great Famine in
which almost two million people starved to death.
Similar failures have happened to every major food crop in
the world, including wheat, corn, potatoes, rice, tomatoes,
coffee and chocolate. In each case farmers turned to
the old traditional varieties to save the commercial
crops.
It is vitally important that the older varieties, with their varied genetic base, be preserved. Without them the world food supply is at risk. Watkins Mill is part of a network of living history farms, individuals, and organizations such as the Seed Savers Exchange, who preserve the non-commercial varieties and exchange heirloom seeds, keeping the old varieties healthy. For more information, write to Seed Savers Exchange at 3076 North Winn RD, Decorah, IA 52101 or call (319) 382-5990.
