Mark Your Calendars on April 4th!
contact: StonySeedyMarket@Gmail.com ph: 780 963 2777Β ex. 1
Volunteer with us! Sign up here.
Please see our statement about GMO seeds below. Check Back Often for Updates!
Celebrate Spring - Support Local Vendors - Learn - Find Unique Seeds and Garden Treasures - Eat - Sharpen Your Tools - Discover Gardening Insights
A'Bunadh Seedsπ·Alberta Horticultural Associationπ·Alberta Native Bee Councilππ·Arnica Wildflowersπ·Backyard Birds Nature Shopπ·Bio Blends Biocharπ·Blossom Hill Gardensπ·Broadview Farmsπ·Canadian Peony Societyπ·The Garden Blendπ·George Pegg Botanic Gardensπ·Josanne Hanlen's diamond art Flower & Plant Stakesπ·Little Beau Seed Co.π·Master Gardenersπ·Matches Seedsπ·Medieval Manor Gardensπ·MOJO Garden Centreπ·Razor's Edge Mobile Sharpening* π·ReSourceful Rusticπ·Seeds of Diversityπ·Stony Plain Horticultural Societyπ·Suzan Berwald's Solstice Studio 59π·Town of Stony Plain ππ€π·Valvanera Echevarria's Herbs & Houseplantsπ·Wagner Natural Area Societyπ·
ππ We've Got Food Trucks! ππ
π₯©MoJo Food Servicesπ₯©Winston's Fish & Chipsπ₯©
πΏπ Presentations! (details below)ππΏ
10:30 Helping our Native Bees
12:00 TBA
1:30 TBA
Β π₯Seed Swapπ₯Presentersπ₯Houseplant Cutting Exchangeπ₯Kid's Activitiesπ₯*Tool Sharpening Service - price listπ₯
πΏπ Presentation DetailsππΏ
10:30 Create Habitat for our Native Bees
Bring the whole family down to hear Ilan "The Bug Guy" Domnich talk about the hundreds of species we have and how to help bees in your own backyard. Great information from the Alberta Native Bee Council.
12:00 TBA
1:30 TBA
Β π₯Seed Swapπ₯Presentersπ₯Houseplant Cutting Exchangeπ₯Kid's Activitiesπ₯*Tool Sharpening Service - price listπ₯
Genetically modified (GM) seeds are being marketed to home gardeners in Canada.
Varieties of concern:
Tomatoes: βAltheaβ, βDark Hollowβ, βThe Elevenβ
Squash/Zuccini: "Independence", "Liberator", "Prelude"
We ask you NOT to bring these seeds to any regional Seedy events this year.
The Canadian Biotechnology Action Network (CBAN) advises that GM tomatoes produce viable seeds that gardeners can save and disperse. Over time, GM seeds are re-saved, re-shared, and spread, and there would be no way to know whether GM seeds are present in our community seed exchanges. Heritage seed collections could become contaminated with GM seeds, fracturing trust in these important seed events that are so important to maintaining seed diversity. Additionally, GM seeds are patented so there is the risk that industry may claim to own those tomatoes and demand a fee for every tomato seed, plant, and fruit sold. That sounds crazy, but it is already happening around the globe. Find more information at these links:
cban.ca/take-action/protect-our-seeds/
cban.ca/wp-content/uploads/Alert-Genetically-Modified-Purple-Tomato.pdf