this is genuinely the coolest thing I've seen in ages. who knew corn had so much diversity and history! thanks for the great vid you just earned another sub!
That black corn is beautiful. I would love to get ahold of the glass gem and Navajo corn. I also want the red and blue corns. They're all beautiful and it's wonderful to see someone so fascinated by pure corn.
Absolutely loved the content of this video. Your coverage of the different types and varieties of heirloom corn and their history was fascinating and very informative. I'd never before contemplated the inherent beauty of corn. I also greatly admire that you're wanting to help preserve at least one of these beautiful varieties, with which I wish you the best.
I've been looking for this sort of video forever! I love anything to do with pre-Colonial Native American culture. Ever since I read the book 1491, I've been looking into all the rare varieties of corn since the book went into good detail of corn and the immense nutrition.
I work for the Missouri Botanical Garden where we have the Anderson-Cutler Maize Collection, previously loaned out to USDA and housed now in our herbarium. Its composed of many thousands of ears, seed samples, and other plant parts representing almost every variety of the New World. Lamentably it is not likely that the seeds could be propagated. They were not stored properly over the decades. Maybe germplasm could be conserved but at best it is a showcase of the enormous variety to be had. I am one of the curatorial assistants to the collection. I've been acquiring and entering data into our database on thousands of South American samples. Such mundane tasks however mean that I get to read thru scientific journal articles, personal letters of collectors, learn about agricultural offices in history, etc. Corn--because of all the crossing and back crossing, the sharing of seed over millenia--really is a vast story book of human history. You follow the evolution of corn and you follow human agriculture, travel, culture, etc etc. Its endlessly fascinating.
Shawn, I loved this. I used to play in corn fields as kid in western NY. Later at Cornell I worked on test plot transgenic BT (root worm specific). Plus WNY the influence of Seneca nation was very strong and people always grew varieties like this and hung them on door in the fall. BTW, have you experimented with some of the basic mendelian genetics principles. You may have some real fun with that doing some back crosses or see kinds alleles are hidden in the plants.
Shawn I really been enjoying these garden videos, but the Heirloom growing is the best, loved this video of our ancient & native corns, though I have to wonder? the pod corn @4:10 was that where the wipe with the corncob originated from? lol Wado Danitaga for these vids & your efforts to keep ancient native strains growing
Last fall we bought some ornamental corn. You inspired me so i took the multi-color one and the dark red one and soaked the seeds in water for three days, then planted them ladt week. I have two patches of corn now lol.
Good on you! I too am growing old varieties of seeds this year. All Baker Creek seeds. My aim is to develop strains that grow well in micro clime. Like our ancestors practiced. Every farmer/gardener saved seeds and looked to improve their harvest. I'm just following their lead.
Hi Shawn. Im from Spain and Corn isn, t a thing here. I tried to plant some red dent but my grandpas told me dad these kind of corn is only for cattle and chikens. A video about tipes of corn and how to cook those will be incredible for me. Thanksss!!
I’m in my early 20’s but I wish I could live like you Shawn..growing some of your own food and having fun with it, hunting your own meat, you’re own farm.
The Carolina Biological Supplies company used to sell Pod Corn seeds. They stopped selling them sometime during the 1980's, but they still sell Albino Corn seeds.
hi Shawn i would love to to get some of the Eagle corn seeds to try and grow some of them great video i really like the history of food we need to keep the rare and ancient seeds going
Well done Shawn, and much respect to you for caring about the natural history of flora and fauna. and for wanting to distribute rare seeding food plants.
All you say is very interesting! How would these seeds, beans, corn etc cope with the growing seasons in England? My favourites are beans, squashes and tomatoes. Thanks for the video
Hey thank you for your gardening videos. I'm curious - what was your water/irrigation/rain situation like when you grrw these corns? I picked up some Hopi corn flour types and from what I've heard they were grown in dry farming...so I'm wondering what to plan for. I do have drip irrigation, and I live in a weird microcolimate of the Bay Area.....any suggestions or insight? Thank you!
Hi, I've seen your videos and I think it's amazing that you have a great variety of corn. It's opened my eyes, I didn't know there was such a range of different rare corn. What really caught my eyes was the pauunee eagle corn. I know you had difficulty getting your hands on it. I'm interested in being part of preserving this corn, how can I get some seeds, I'm from the UK. DO you sell them?
Shawn - PLEASE POST some pictures of the Pawnee Eagle Corn plants. I'm right down the road from you in Oregon, and would love a chance to get a few kernels to keep the strain protected. I happen to have some real popcorn from one of the farms near Valparaiso, in Indiana that grows for "Orville Redenbacher" should you want to give it a try..
Great video and very interesting. In the future could you mention if you have consumed them and, if so, what they taste like? You only commented on one or two of these.
Awesome video! What would you say is the most low maintenance heirloom variety for the PNW dry summers? Also how much can you grow different varieties of corn together without them crossbreeding?
this is genuinely the coolest thing I've seen in ages. who knew corn had so much diversity and history! thanks for the great vid you just earned another sub!
Bob Steve (
us native do xD
Yup us natives. The Aztecs developed corn
B
You are not allowed to grow eagle corn
Glad people like you are helping to protect these rare plants from extinction!!!
Not with the average city folk that dont even know about corn
Shawn I was totally entranced by this video. Heirloom corn is so much more than I could ever imagine. Thank you for sharing your knowledge with us.
Love Native American History. Choctaw Native here. Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Cherokee here.
Im part Choctaw 🙌 love my people ✊️
Hopefully I get a few cobs this year from my big garden.
Chöd
That black corn is beautiful. I would love to get ahold of the glass gem and Navajo corn. I also want the red and blue corns. They're all beautiful and it's wonderful to see someone so fascinated by pure corn.
I liked the part about the corn.
Absolutely loved the content of this video. Your coverage of the different types and varieties of heirloom corn and their history was fascinating and very informative. I'd never before contemplated the inherent beauty of corn. I also greatly admire that you're wanting to help preserve at least one of these beautiful varieties, with which I wish you the best.
Thx Shawn!, I love learning gardening info, but the history lesson is amazing!
Also, thanks for educating us which breeds are easiest to grow.
I find Native American history so interesting. I have some Mayan ancestry and I love learning about them. This is why I love your channel.
I'm so glad you still practice the way. Please please keep sharing
Corn is simply amazing
LaSigna 02 it's called maize to be exact
You might say it's... a-maize-ing
Har har har
I've been looking for this sort of video forever!
I love anything to do with pre-Colonial Native American culture.
Ever since I read the book 1491, I've been looking into all the rare varieties of corn since the book went into good detail of corn and the immense nutrition.
Keep them coming. I am learning so much. Thank you and peace be with you.
You do awesome and informative video's- whether they are your glass arrowheads or the mouse traps and now food. Fantastic.!
That eagle corn in something else, awesome that your helping to bring it back.
Amazing stuff, man. Love your videos, very educational. I live in Australia and it fascinates me that there is such variety of corn.
I work for the Missouri Botanical Garden where we have the Anderson-Cutler Maize Collection, previously loaned out to USDA and housed now in our herbarium. Its composed of many thousands of ears, seed samples, and other plant parts representing almost every variety of the New World. Lamentably it is not likely that the seeds could be propagated. They were not stored properly over the decades. Maybe germplasm could be conserved but at best it is a showcase of the enormous variety to be had. I am one of the curatorial assistants to the collection. I've been acquiring and entering data into our database on thousands of South American samples. Such mundane tasks however mean that I get to read thru scientific journal articles, personal letters of collectors, learn about agricultural offices in history, etc. Corn--because of all the crossing and back crossing, the sharing of seed over millenia--really is a vast story book of human history. You follow the evolution of corn and you follow human agriculture, travel, culture, etc etc. Its endlessly fascinating.
Great video, I pray you keep expanding upon these great subjects in future!
Amazing video! I love rare food crops! I plan on growing some heirloom squashes and pumpkins when I get a garden. Love your garden series, keep it up!
Awesome video and God Bless you for growing the Eagle Corn!!! Beautiful, blessed
Shawn, I loved this. I used to play in corn fields as kid in western NY. Later at Cornell I worked on test plot transgenic BT (root worm specific). Plus WNY the influence of Seneca nation was very strong and people always grew varieties like this and hung them on door in the fall. BTW, have you experimented with some of the basic mendelian genetics principles. You may have some real fun with that doing some back crosses or see kinds alleles are hidden in the plants.
Please do another basic survival shelter video. The last one was so good.
Shawn I really been enjoying these garden videos, but the Heirloom growing is the best, loved this video of our ancient & native corns, though I have to wonder? the pod corn @4:10 was that where the wipe with the corncob originated from? lol
Wado Danitaga for these vids & your efforts to keep ancient native strains growing
Just came across your heirloom and rare seed videos and they are awesome. I’d love to see and hear more.
That gemstone corn makes me want to start my own garden. Great video!
Last fall we bought some ornamental corn. You inspired me so i took the multi-color one and the dark red one and soaked the seeds in water for three days, then planted them ladt week. I have two patches of corn now lol.
Looks like my Mom's thanksgiving bouquet. Thanks for keeping these rare strains alive.
awesome. I'm glad your mouse trap vids are a big hit. But these native/survival videos are why I subscribed, good to see you making them still!
Shawn, you are one cool dude, thank you for all you do, and keep those videos coming. I wish we were neighbors....
Good job on keeping types of rare corn growing.
Good on you! I too am growing old varieties of seeds this year. All Baker Creek seeds. My aim is to develop strains that grow well in micro clime. Like our ancestors practiced. Every farmer/gardener saved seeds and looked to improve their harvest. I'm just following their lead.
Hi Shawn. Im from Spain and Corn isn, t a thing here. I tried to plant some red dent but my grandpas told me dad these kind of corn is only for cattle and chikens. A video about tipes of corn and how to cook those will be incredible for me. Thanksss!!
Thanks for helping preserve genetic diversity! Great video!
This is so great! It's amazing how you're preserving these! Would be cool to see how they actually taste :)
corn is definitely an favorite not only as an food but because of its extremely diverse culture
The Pawnee Eagle Corn caught my attention.. Big Time lol
Absolutely fascinating! I had no idea corn was this varied and beautiful. It is totally an archaic crop!
I learnt something today. Thanks Shawn. Fascinating
That was an incredible video. I.really enjoyed it. Thanks
This is simply amazing. Maybe one day I’d be able to help preserve this rare species of corn.
This is so interesting! I would love to see more video's about these kinds of topics or the corn itself.
Very interesting. I honestly loved the video. Keep up the awesome videos.
I’m in my early 20’s but I wish I could live like you Shawn..growing some of your own food and having fun with it, hunting your own meat, you’re own farm.
Beautiful and educational heritage corn video. Thanks.
why isn't tiny corn which you can pop on the cob a thing, that's cool, people would go nuts for that surely?
Element45 people probably don't know about it.
Element45 at many apple orchards I've been to up here in nh you can usually find a popable corncob at their farm stands.
Great inf0 I grow to take to market, u have great variety, eagle corn cool as hell, glad u got some kernels so u could share w us, thanks
Outstanding collection.
So Cool! Thanks for What you Do!
The Carolina Biological Supplies company used to sell Pod Corn seeds. They stopped selling them sometime during the 1980's, but they still sell Albino Corn seeds.
I'm now interested in the Chipotle corn 🙌 amazing information 👌
Fantastic, thanks for all the great info!
I may have to find some of that Tom Thumb corn, my niece and nephew would love it!
Very cool Shawn!
Really enjoy the history behind the vast varieties of corn outside of the normal yellow corn on a cob
hi Shawn i would love to to get some of the Eagle corn seeds to try and grow some of them great video i really like the history of food we need to keep the rare and ancient seeds going
Very interesting. Great video.
Great presentation.
More garden videos YAY!
another great video shawn
I love baker creek! So glad I found them
Fantastic, thanks for the great info.
Awesome video! Would love to grow these
Thank you for protecting the seeds
This is why I subscribed.
Such an inspiration!!!!
Woah, that pawnee eagle corn is really cool
Well done Shawn, and much respect to you for caring about the natural history of flora and fauna. and for wanting to distribute rare seeding food plants.
Very colorful.
this was actually pretty damn cool. gg Shawn
Outstanding.
This is so cool!
awesome! some beautiful ears of corn, even if some didn't grow too well.
All you say is very interesting! How would these seeds, beans, corn etc cope with the growing seasons in England? My favourites are beans, squashes and tomatoes. Thanks for the video
Hey thank you for your gardening videos. I'm curious - what was your water/irrigation/rain situation like when you grrw these corns? I picked up some Hopi corn flour types and from what I've heard they were grown in dry farming...so I'm wondering what to plan for. I do have drip irrigation, and I live in a weird microcolimate of the Bay Area.....any suggestions or insight? Thank you!
beautiful and informative video wish i could get some of these seeds Trinidad only has one type of corn
wow that eagle corn is amazing!
Thx for sharing!
I am a corn farmer too.. Corn is also a staple food in our country 😊😊
You really deserve the like👍🏼
Great Job :D
Hi, I've seen your videos and I think it's amazing that you have a great variety of corn. It's opened my eyes, I didn't know there was such a range of different rare corn. What really caught my eyes was the pauunee eagle corn. I know you had difficulty getting your hands on it. I'm interested in being part of preserving this corn, how can I get some seeds, I'm from the UK. DO you sell them?
Thank you
Much respect!!!
those different types of corn just blew my mind
Shawn -
PLEASE POST some pictures of the Pawnee Eagle Corn plants. I'm right down the road from you in Oregon, and would love a chance to get a few kernels to keep the strain protected. I happen to have some real popcorn from one of the farms near Valparaiso, in Indiana that grows for "Orville Redenbacher" should you want to give it a try..
that so neat man thanks for the lesson
Awesome!
Those Tom Thumb cobs are adorable!
I really like Baker Creek. I bought from them before and I will again.
Great video and very interesting. In the future could you mention if you have consumed them and, if so, what they taste like? You only commented on one or two of these.
That eagle corn looks dang good and 300 plants????? Cnt wait to see those!!
You're the Man.
thank you
Hello Shawn. This was such a wonderful video! Do you have any more of the Pawnee eagle corn?
passionate people make me happy
Last season I grew Anasazi (for the third year), Blue Hopi, Black Navajo and Inca Rainbow (all new to me).
I hope that you can make more videos of that rare blue corn from Peru. what is it like?
Awesome video! What would you say is the most low maintenance heirloom variety for the PNW dry summers? Also how much can you grow different varieties of corn together without them crossbreeding?
great job turning 10 seeds into 300, hopefully they will turn into 10 000!
He turned 10 seeds into 300 plants. He has way more seeds than that.