:QUOTE [quotetype:personal] Seeds are living archives. A community seed library is an act of collective memory. :INFO Community Seed Library Start a seed library where community members borrow seeds, grow plants, and return seeds at the end of the season. Libraries, community centers, and gardens are ideal hosts. :COUNTER.half 200 Varieties | :COUNTER.half :PATH Collect the Seeds Start with open-pollinated vegetables, herbs, and native wildflowers. Accept donations from local gardeners but verify seeds are true-to-type and disease-free. Partner with a regional seed saving network for bulk. :PATH Catalog the Collection Use a spreadsheet or free library software like Koha to catalog varieties. Record germination rate, harvest year, and donor name. Replace seeds older than 3 to 5 years with fresh stock. :PATH Run the Lending System Create simple borrowing envelopes with planting instructions. Set a return policy: borrowers return twice the seeds they borrowed at season end. Host a seed swap event annually to refresh the collection. :CHECKLIST Launch Checklist [ ] Partner with a host location: library, community garden, or school [ ] Collect 50 open-pollinated varieties before opening to borrowers [ ] Print seed envelopes with variety name and planting instructions [ ] Create a borrower sign-in sheet or simple checkout system [ ] Write a one-page seed saving guide for borrowers [ ] Host a launch event with a seed swap and planting workshop [ ] Apply to Seed Savers Exchange for a donation of starter varieties :NOTE Focus on varieties well-suited to your specific climate and growing season. Local adaptation matters more than variety count. Twenty varieties that thrive locally are more useful than two hundred that struggle.