Seed Balls

Propagation Method Promoted by Masanobu Fukuoka

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Dry Seed Balls In The Sun - Arlene Marturano
Dry Seed Balls In The Sun - Arlene Marturano
It just takes seed to get the ball rolling in your yard, neighborhood, or community. Toss seed balls on the land and watch how they change the face of a place.

Seed balls are handrolled compressed globes of seed enclosed in a mixture of compost, clay and water. The clay and humus keep the seeds from drying out in the sun, being eaten by predators, such as birds, squirrels, grubs or mice; blowing away in the breeze, or washing away in runoff. When adequate rainfall penetrates the clay, the seeds sprout within the nutrient rich compost.

Seed balls, also known as earth dumplings and earth cookies, can be made anywhere in the world where there is clay, compost, seed and water. Each seed ball is a miniature adobe garden.

History of Seed Balls

Native Americans may have been the first to introduce the seed ball concept. Legend has it that they protected their seed from weather, predators and transport by storing them inside clay balls.

In more recent times a Japanese soil scientist and founder of natural farming, Masanobu Fukuoka, reintroduced the seed ball concept when rebuilding habitats in arid regions. He considered the seed ball as a portable habitat awaiting only the suitable rain to stimulate growth. Fukuoka’s method of broadcasting seed balls on top of barren land without weeding, tilling, pesticides or fertilizer is used today in land rehabilitation projects worldwide.

Seed Ball Projects

Throughout the United States youth and adults are using marble-sized seed balls to plant gardens, create wildflower meadows, rejuvenate vacant lots, revegetate deserts, and establish or restore habitats.

  • In Los Alamos, New Mexico school children made seed balls of native grasses and wildflowers to restore acres of burned forestland.
  • Students in San Diego supplied 2 million seed balls to replace a 200-acre coastal sagebrush habitat destroyed by wildfire.
  • Girl Scouts reseeded thirty degraded sites in New Jersey with native plants using the seed ball dispersal technique.
  • Urban Habitat Chicago scatters seed balls on vacant lots to bring back life to blighted areas.

Recipe for Seed Balls

The recipe for seed balls is simple and messy. It is best to make seed balls outdoors or to cover the indoor work area with a large plastic tarp. Large bowls or plastic bins are needed for mixing ingredients.

  1. Pour one part seed mix into a bowl.
  2. Add three parts compost or humus.
  3. Mix well with fingers to coat seeds in compost.
  4. Add five parts powdered red terra cotta clay mixing thoroughly into compost mixture.
  5. Add two parts water gradually (may not need all).
  6. Knead mixture to a cookie dough consistency.
  7. Pinch off small pieces and roll into ¾ inch diameter balls.
  8. Sun-dry seed balls for 24-48 hours.
  9. Since seeds are already planted, toss on the surface at a density of 10 balls per square meter.
  10. Celebrate what happens after a penetrating rain!

Selecting Seed

Seed selection will depend on the goals of the project. Native plants have the greatest success in large scale habitat development projects. The Ladybird Johnson Wildflower Center is an excellent resource for selecting local natives. State native plant societies and state natural resource departments feature profiles on native plants.

Salad greens and herbs are excellent choices for kitchen garden seed balls. Seed balls with such annuals as marigolds, cornflowers, zinnias, tithonia, and torenia bring instant success. A mix to attract beneficial insects might include nasturtium, amaranth, anise hyssop, alyssum, fennel, and yarrow. Cover crops like clover, buckwheat, fava beans, and rye can be dispersed easily with seed balls.

Add suspense to the adventure by experimenting with a variety of seed mixes. Let the good times roll with seed balls wherever you toss the garden.

Arlene Marturano, Alt-Lee Studios

Arlene Marturano - Arlene Marturano, an educator, consultant, master gardener, and writer advocates gardens as a context and gardening as a tool for ...

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Comments

May 14, 2010 1:43 AM
Guest :
Antiquity
Hi,
The Ancients seem to have held some knowledge (once again) on seed pelleting as M. Evenari (1984) shows: Pliny the Elder "is apparently (...) the first to describe seed pelleting. Seeds of various vegetables "are planted enclosed in hollow pellets of goats' dung, each seed in a separate pellet, they came up wonderfully" (Plinius, Naturalis Historia.Book XIX, LX: 185)".
See: Plinius (Gaius Plinius Secundus), Books XII-XIX, 2 Vols. Loeb Classical Libr. Heinemann, London and Harvard Univ. Press, Boston. (1960, 1971); in M. Evenari, Seed Physiology: Its History from Antiquity to the Beginning of the 20th Century.The Botanical Review, Vol. 50 April, June 1984 No. 2, p119-142.
Many blogs, and websites report that seedballs were used by "some native american tribes".
Since no references are given, one should discard this piece of information until evidence are discovered.
So far the only use of clay pellets by native american tribes I have managed to extract is 'projectiles for blowguns'.
After many dead-ends I have found a paper (Oelke, E.A. 1993. Wild rice: Domestication of a native North American genus. p. 235-243. In: J. Janick and J.E. Simon (eds.), New crops. Wiley, New York.) that says what follows:
"Perhaps the first individuals to attempt to increase availability of wild rice for food were Native Americans (Steeves 1952). Often suitable lakes or rivers were seeded to wild rice by mixing seed into clay, rolling it into a ball and dropping the clay ball into the water. This resulted in some, but not significant, increase in natural stands."
Steeves Steeves, T.A. 1952. Wild rice: Indian food and a modern delicacy. Econ. Bot. 26:107-142.
I nevertheless haven't been able to detect in this paper the mention of anything related to seedballs, quite the opposite as the following shows:
"The Menomini, who of all the tribes have been the most profoundly influenced by wild rice, appear to have possessed a knowledge of the plant from the very beginning of their tribal organization.
According to their legend, Miinibush, one of their many mythical halfgod creatures, created the bear out of the earth and of the bear made an Indian whom he called Skekatchekenan. This Indian then was established as leader of the bear phratry, the first section of the tribe, and to him Manabush gave a river (the Menominee), the fish in it, the sugar trees along its banks, and the rice which grew in its shallows, with assurances that he and his followers should always have these things. After the tribe developed a unified organization, these gifts became the property of the whole group. Remembering that they were promised that they would always have rice, these Indians have always refused to sow the grain, maintaining that such action woukt constitute a breach of faith" (p13).
and:
"Therehave been occasional reports of Indians sowing the grain, thereby establishing new stands for harvest, and of weeding unwanted plants from the rice marshes during the growing season, but such practices seem rather to have been the exception than the rule" (p.20).
As read in
http://sites.google.com/site/onseedballs/Home/what
Take care
Anthony
1
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