Joseph Lofthouse

author & steward
+ Follow
since Dec 16, 2014
Merit badge: bb list bbv list
Biography

Joseph Lofthouse grew up on the farm and in the community that was settled by his ggg-grandmother and her son. He still farms there. Growing conditions are high-altitude brilliantly-sunlit desert mountain valley in Northern Utah with irrigation, clayish-silty high-pH soil, super low humidity, short-season, and intense radiant cooling at night. Joseph learned traditional agricultural and seed saving techniques from his grandfather and father. Joseph is a sustenance market farmer and landrace seed-developer. He grows seed for about 95 species. Joseph is enamored with landrace growing and is working to convert every species that he grows into adaptivar landraces. He writes the Landrace Gardening Blog for Mother Earth News.
Farming Philosophy
Promiscuous Pollination and ongoing segregation are encouraged in all varieties. Joseph's style of landrace gardening can best be summed up as throwing a bunch of varieties into a field, allowing them to promiscuously cross pollinate, and then through a combination of survival-of-the-fittest and farmer-directed selection saving seeds year after year to arrive at a locally-adapted genetically-diverse population that thrives because it is closely tied to the land, the weather, the pests, the farmer's habits and tastes, and community desires.
Joseph lives under a vow of poverty and grows using subsistence level conditions without using cides or fertilizers. He prefers to select for genetics that can thrive under existing conditions. He figures that it is easier to change the genetics of a population of plants than it is to modify the soil, weather, bugs, etc. For example, because Joseph's weeding is marginal, plants have to germinate quickly, and burst out of the soil with robust growth in order to compete with the weeds.
Biodiversity
For More
Cache Valley, zone 4b, Irrigated, 9" rain in badlands.
Apples and Likes
Apples
Total received
In last 30 days
28
Forums and Threads

Recent posts by Joseph Lofthouse

🌿The 2025 Landrace Seed Share Ends Soon!

The Landrace Seed Share wraps up for the year in just a week or two—offering you a last chance to get seeds you can't find anywhere else. After a recent inventory, we found a few rare varieties—previously marked as out of stock—now back and available again.

These seeds don’t fall into the “ordinary” category. Gardeners like you—people who value resilience, biodiversity, and flavor—grew and improved them over time. Then, a dedicated team of seed stewards selected the best of those seeds, prepared them carefully, and lovingly packed them for sharing. Huge thanks go out to everyone who helped make this happen—especially Anna Mieritz and Lowell McCampbell, who put in extraordinary effort with organizing and shipping

🌱 Why These Seeds Matter:
These seeds hold tremendous genetic diversity—a powerful tool for starting your own Adaptation Agriculture journey. Grow them, save seeds from the top performers in your garden, and in just a few seasons, you’ll have your own locally adapted, climate-smart varieties.

These seeds come from generous gardeners across the country, and from the Going To Seed Farmer Support program, with funding provided by the Clif Family Foundation. We feel deeply grateful for their contributions—and for your participation in this effort.

🌿 Looking to grow something extraordinary this year?
You now hold the opportunity to claim a packet full of genetic potential. Act quickly—the window closes soon, and the seed share won’t return until next year.

👉 Browse the 2025 Seed Collection

Let’s grow something resilient, together.

p.s.
We intend to donate any left over seeds to schools, seed libraries, prisons, etc. If you could use large quantities please reach out to us.
3 days ago
I know the owners. Very ethical.
4 days ago
What I know as foxtail grasses have an annual growth habit, therefore, suppressing them might involve growing perennial grasses and wildflowers.
6 days ago
In my ecosystem, common guild plants for serviceberry include maple, sagebrush, smooth brome, annual grasses, violets, lilies, burdock, chokecherry, balsamroots, spring beauties, antelope bitterbrush, opuntia, boxelder, and lomatium.
2 weeks ago
I visit Mansfield Missouri the first weekend of May.
3 weeks ago
For example, in dealing with corn... The Hopi elder's claim was that the corn is only Hopi corn if it is grown by the Hopi on Hopi land. Once it is no longer grown by the Hopi people, and/or no longer grown on Hopi land, the corn ceases to be Hopi.

Genetically, that makes a lot of sense to me. Because, as soon as a crop leaves it's traditional homeland, and is no longer cultivated by the traditional methods, it undergoes dramatic genetic change in order to cope with the new environment and farmer's habits. No matter how much we may wish for the old varieties, I believe that they expired centuries ago, and were replaced by something else.

3 weeks ago
I once heard of a Hopi elder saying that once a seed leaves Hopiland that it ceases to be Hopi. I wonder if the same thing would apply to a Swedish variety grown in Chicago? In any case, after hundreds of years, I don't expect a variety to carry the same genetics, even if it carries the same name.



3 weeks ago
My seed grown currents started flowering for the first time. I collected them from the nearby wildlands. Pigmentation of the mother fruits included black, yellow, or red.

I started with about 33 seed grown apricots. About 1/3 self-culled by not surviving the winter. I culled others because the bark died on part of the trunks. One plant of the 12 currently flowers, a week later than the rest. What a lovely trait. One plant hasn't started flowering yet, but it doesn't thrive due to lack of winter-hardiness. Perhaps I should grow offspring from it anyway, to see we can delay flowering even more, and perhaps find  more winter hardy offspring. The later to flower, the more likely the flowers will survive frost.

I didn't cull any plants due to the flavor of the fruits... The whole population tasted good.
3 weeks ago


OSZAR »