04/12/2025 / By Jacob Thomas
In Episode 4 of “Prepare Tribe: Prepare, Protect, Provide,” aired on April 8, Alex Mitchell, one of the founders of Ark Seed Kits & Prepare Tribe, shared how her hobby of gardening led to combating corporate extinction of heirloom crops. It began when she discovered that the hybrid seeds sold in garden stores — what she calls the “Trojan horses” of modern agriculture — fail to reproduce, forcing farmers to buy new ones yearly. She became a frontline fighter in a global battle for seed sovereignty.
Now, Mitchell runs a clandestine seed-saving operation, preserving over 70 varieties of heirloom vegetables whose lineages stretch back centuries. Her mission is to protect biodiversity — and food freedom — from the grip of corporate-controlled agriculture.
Mitchell’s journey began in 2008, when she planted her first backyard garden. “I just wanted fresh tomatoes for my family,” she recalled. But after learning that hybrid seeds — engineered for one-time use — couldn’t be replanted, she was stunned. “It’s a dependency cycle. Farmers and gardeners are forced to buy seeds every year from a handful of corporations.”
Heirloom seeds, by contrast, are open-pollinated, passed down through generations. “These seeds have survived droughts, blights and wars,” Mitchell explained. “They’re resilient because they’ve adapted over centuries. But they’re disappearing.”
Mitchell’s homegrown rebellion grew into Arc Seed Kits, a business supplying heirloom seeds worldwide. But her work is part of a larger movement. From the Svalbard Global Seed Vault in Norway to grassroots networks like the Open Source Seed Initiative, activists are racing to preserve genetic diversity.
“Big Ag pushes GMOs and patents,” Mitchell said. “But if a crisis hits — climate collapse, a pandemic — we’ll need these ancient varieties to adapt.” She cited the Irish Potato Famine, where reliance on a single crop led to disaster. “Monocultures are a recipe for extinction.”
Mitchell’s greenhouse is a living archive. Among her treasures: a Cherokee Purple tomato, a Dragon’s Tongue bean and a Glass Gem corn so vibrant it “looks like stained glass.” These aren’t just plants — they’re time capsules of flavor and resilience.
“Take this tomato,” she said, holding a sun-warmed fruit. “Its seeds hold stories of Indigenous growers, migrant farmers, my grandma’s kitchen. If we lose them, we lose our history — and our future.” Corporate seed patents and GMO dominance loom large, but Mitchell remains defiant. “Every time someone plants an heirloom seed, they’re voting for food freedom,” she said. Her advice to beginners? Start small. Save seeds. Share them. “Seeds are meant to be free,” she added. “They’re not property. They’re life.”
Disruptions can happen at any time, be it natural disasters, economic downturns or unexpected emergencies. But with the right preparation, you won’t just survive, you will thrive. If you want to learn more about how you can be more resilient, want to view the presentations at your convenience or learn at your own pace, you can purchase the “Prepare Tribe: Prepare, Protect, Provide” package here.
Upon purchase, you will get instant and unlimited access to all “Prepare Tribe” episodes and bonus items, including Advanced Food Preservation Technique video, Food Self-Reliance e-Book, free access to Morgan and Alex’s 5-Day Challenge and 50 percent discount on the Backyard Seed Kit only on Health Ranger Store.
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Tagged Under:
backyard gardening, biodiversity, Cherokee Purple tomato, corporate agriculture, food freedom, gardening, GMOs, heirloom seeds, hybrid seeds, Irish Potato Famine, monoculture, Prepare Tribe, seed saving, seed sharing, seed sovereignty, sustainable farming
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