Borrow, Grow, Return!
Each spring, the library will feature locally developed varieties that you can “Borrow“. We’ll provide you with enough seed so that you can Grow plants to eat and to save seeds. We ask that you select several of your most vigorous, fast maturing and delicious plants to go “to seed”. At the end of the season, Return your cleaned and dried seed to the Jefferson County Library. You will find a blue bucket underneath the Seed Check-out table or at our seed cleaning event.
Returned seed will be combined with others of the same variety. The following year, we’ll distribute the seed to the community.
Our seed inventory changes throughout the season. Please check us out at the Jefferson County Library (to the right of the main desk).
Example seeds:
Vegetables & Herbs: spinach, beets, swiss chard, fava beans, broccoli rabe, kale, turnips, snap-peas, mustard, lettuce, radish, cilantro, parsely,
Flowers: marigold, phacelia (bee’s friend), calendula, sunflower
Become a Member
Seed Saving Education
2025 Community Seed Project
Check out seeds at the Libraries
Read our story in the Port Townsend Leader: What’s New at the Community Seed Library!
Questions? Email us at seedlibrarywsu@gmail.com.
Thank you for doing your part to support community food resilience.
Karen Seabrook ~ Jefferson County Extension Seed Library Manager
Mado Most ~ Jefferson County Extension Community Seed Project Coordinator
Seed Library Tribal Acknowledgement
Washington State University acknowledges that its locations statewide are on the homelands of Native peoples who have lived in this region from time immemorial. Currently, there are 42 tribes in Washington, 35 of which are federally recognized, that share traditional homelands and waterways in what is now Washington State.
Here on the Olympic Peninsula, Tribes include the Lower Elwha, the Jamestown S’Klallam, the Port Gamble S’Klallam, the Skokomish, the Quinault, the Hoh, the Quileute and the Makah.
The University expresses its deepest respect for, and gratitude towards these original and current caretakers of the region. As an academic community, we acknowledge our responsibility to establish and maintain relationships with these tribes and Native peoples, in support of tribal sovereignty and the inclusion of their voices in teaching, research and programming.
As a land grant institution, we also recognize that the Morrill Act of 1862 established land-grant institutions by providing each state with “public” and federal lands, which are traced back to Indigenous peoples. In 1890, Washington State received 90,081 acres of Indigenous lands designated to establish Washington State University. Washington State University retains the majority of these lands to this day. We acknowledge that Indigenous lands were often taken by coercive and violent acts, and the disregard of treaties. For that, we extend our deepest apologies. We owe our deepest gratitude to the Native peoples of this region and maintain our commitment towards reconciliation.
*The seeds being distributed by The Seed Library of Jefferson County may not meet germination or varietal purity standards prescribed by the state (see law). Patented seed or varieties protected by the Plant Variety Protection Act will not be accepted or distributed by The Seed Library without permission of the certificate holder.