58 min.

EP. 26: Saving Spiny Nightshades, Breeding Cannabis, Adapting Tropical Crops, and much more with Northeastern Connecticut Botanist Bryan Connolly Seeds And Their People

    • Maatschappij en cultuur

Dr. Bryan Connolly is a botanist, horticulturalist, and professor of Biology at Eastern Connecticut University in Willimantic, CT, my (Owen's) hometown. His research interests include rare plants of New England, the nightshade family, the rose family, and cannabis. Before Eastern, Professor Connolly was a faculty member at Framingham State University in Massachusetts and also worked for the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife, University of Mississippi’s Medicinal Plant Garden, New England Wild Flower Society, and the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection. He is also involved in his family farm: Cobblestone Farm CSA in Mansfield Center, CT. Bryan appreciates his family's tolerance of his growing unusual plants, especially his wife Diane Dorfer, and he is sorry about the Erubia spines all over the yard a few years back. He thanks his son William for helping to take care of the spiny Erubia as well! 
In this interview we hear about Bryan's 33 year journey with seed saving, seed production, and plant breeding; his work with giving a boost and sometimes reintroducing native plants from New England to Puerto Rico; his work with students around growing cannabis for medicinal uses; and his trials and initial breeding work with some crops we shared with him, including pigeon peas, field peas, and roselle. 
 
SEED AND PLANT STORIES TOLD IN THIS EPISODE:


Chenopodium formosanum (Taiwan)


Grass Jelly (Taiwan, Indonesia)


Erubia (Puerto Rico)


Corpse Flower (Indonesia)


Easter in August Cherry Tomato


Minnesota 13 Field Pea


Bo (Black-Eyed Pea Leaves)


Mississippi Purple Hull Pea


Northern Adapted Pigeon Peas


Solanum chacoense (South America)


Cannabis (specifically the beverage, Bhang from India)

Chin Baung (Burmese Roselle Leaf)

 
MORE INFO FROM THIS EPISODE:


Bryan's ECSU professor bio


Bryan's instagram: Northeastern Connecticut Botany


Breeding Organic Vegatables, NOFA publication, by Rowen White and Bryan Connolly


Organic Seed Production and Saving, NOFA publication, by Bryan Connolly


Stewarding Indigenous Seeds and Planting by the Moon with Stephen Silverbear McComber, Seed Savers Exchange


Ploidy (number of chromosomes in a cell)


Ploidy, genetic diversity and speciation of the genus Aronia


ABOUT:
Seeds And Their People is a radio show where we feature seed stories told by the people who truly love them. Hosted by Owen Taylor of Truelove Seeds and Chris Bolden-Newsome of Sankofa Community Farm at Bartram’s Garden.
trueloveseeds.com/blogs/satpradio
 
FIND OWEN HERE:
Truelove Seeds
Facebook  |  Instagram  |  Twitter
 
FIND CHRIS HERE:
Sankofa Community Farm at Bartram’s Garden

Dr. Bryan Connolly is a botanist, horticulturalist, and professor of Biology at Eastern Connecticut University in Willimantic, CT, my (Owen's) hometown. His research interests include rare plants of New England, the nightshade family, the rose family, and cannabis. Before Eastern, Professor Connolly was a faculty member at Framingham State University in Massachusetts and also worked for the Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife, University of Mississippi’s Medicinal Plant Garden, New England Wild Flower Society, and the Connecticut Department of Environmental Protection. He is also involved in his family farm: Cobblestone Farm CSA in Mansfield Center, CT. Bryan appreciates his family's tolerance of his growing unusual plants, especially his wife Diane Dorfer, and he is sorry about the Erubia spines all over the yard a few years back. He thanks his son William for helping to take care of the spiny Erubia as well! 
In this interview we hear about Bryan's 33 year journey with seed saving, seed production, and plant breeding; his work with giving a boost and sometimes reintroducing native plants from New England to Puerto Rico; his work with students around growing cannabis for medicinal uses; and his trials and initial breeding work with some crops we shared with him, including pigeon peas, field peas, and roselle. 
 
SEED AND PLANT STORIES TOLD IN THIS EPISODE:


Chenopodium formosanum (Taiwan)


Grass Jelly (Taiwan, Indonesia)


Erubia (Puerto Rico)


Corpse Flower (Indonesia)


Easter in August Cherry Tomato


Minnesota 13 Field Pea


Bo (Black-Eyed Pea Leaves)


Mississippi Purple Hull Pea


Northern Adapted Pigeon Peas


Solanum chacoense (South America)


Cannabis (specifically the beverage, Bhang from India)

Chin Baung (Burmese Roselle Leaf)

 
MORE INFO FROM THIS EPISODE:


Bryan's ECSU professor bio


Bryan's instagram: Northeastern Connecticut Botany


Breeding Organic Vegatables, NOFA publication, by Rowen White and Bryan Connolly


Organic Seed Production and Saving, NOFA publication, by Bryan Connolly


Stewarding Indigenous Seeds and Planting by the Moon with Stephen Silverbear McComber, Seed Savers Exchange


Ploidy (number of chromosomes in a cell)


Ploidy, genetic diversity and speciation of the genus Aronia


ABOUT:
Seeds And Their People is a radio show where we feature seed stories told by the people who truly love them. Hosted by Owen Taylor of Truelove Seeds and Chris Bolden-Newsome of Sankofa Community Farm at Bartram’s Garden.
trueloveseeds.com/blogs/satpradio
 
FIND OWEN HERE:
Truelove Seeds
Facebook  |  Instagram  |  Twitter
 
FIND CHRIS HERE:
Sankofa Community Farm at Bartram’s Garden

58 min.

Top-podcasts in Maatschappij en cultuur

De Jongen Zonder Gisteren
NPO Luister / WNL
Redders op Zee
KNRM x Fisherman’s Friend
Morele ambitie, de podcast
The School for Moral Ambition
Van Dis Ongefilterd
Atlas Contact / Adriaan van Dis
De Jortcast
NPO Radio 1 / AVROTROS
Teun en Gijs vertellen alles
Teun van de Keuken & Gijs Groenteman