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How To: Make Seed Bombs

Jonathan noted today's LA Times profile about militant gardening, with Angelenos looking to change the urban landscape one seed bomb at a time. Hidden in the article is a helpful photo instructional how-to, as shown above. Don't mistake those seed "bombs" above for truffles...they're the arsenal of the urban gardeners mentioned in today's LA Times article. Details how to make your own below...

[photo: Gina Ferazzi / Los Angeles Times]

 
 
Part beautification, part eco-activism, part social outlet, the activity has been fueled by Internet gardening blogs and sites such as GuerrillaGardening.org, where before-and-after photos of the latest "troop digs" inspire 45,000 visitors a month to make derelict soil bloom.

"We can make much more out of the land than how it's being used, whether it's about creating food or beautifying it," says the movement's ringleader and GuerrillaGardening.org founder, Richard Reynolds, by phone from his London home. His tribe includes freelance landscapers like Scott, urban farmers, floral fans and artists.

You can join the resistance and follow the LAT's step-by-step instructions, with more details about the greening movement that has taken foothold in London, Berlin, Miami, San Francisco and Southern California.

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How To..., gardening, green ideas, LA Times, guerrilla gardening, seed bombs

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Comments (7)

And I thought those were baby Purple Potatoes...

posted by bepsf on May 29th 2008 at 2:17pm
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What a rad idea!

posted by ElizaTruitt on May 29th 2008 at 3:19pm
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i LOVE it!

posted by yoonicorn on May 29th 2008 at 3:32pm
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Making bombs would make one feel like an anarchist, which is always fun, but in the future plants' interest, it would be better to mix seeds, soil, and compost in little ziplocks and strew them. During a rain.

posted by Aulaire on May 30th 2008 at 1:40am
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I am SO blogging about this!

And I'm going to do it here in Ann Arbor!

www.thebitterfoodie.blogspot.com

posted by thebitterfoodie on May 30th 2008 at 5:12am
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this is beautiful.

posted by theora55 on May 30th 2008 at 6:03am
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Sounds like a good idea, but not really. One of the biggest problems in environmental preservation is invasive exotic plant species. This will probably only excacerbate it. Using native plant seeds...now that would be a better idea.

posted by somedudeinvicenza on June 2nd 2008 at 3:48am
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