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About Craig
I've been interested in gardening as long as I can remember. My dad used to take me to Slater Park in Pawtucket, Rhode Island - I rode on his shoulders as he walked through the flower beds and told me what kinds they were. My grandfather had a wonderful vegetable garden behind his house; although I was never thrilled with the sight of so many large spiders, the Dahlias and Sweet Peas were beautiful, his strawberries just incredible - and his tomatoes were the first I was brave enough to eat, probably when I was around 10 years old. So I guess that this is all my grandfather's fault! (His name was Walter Gibbs, by the way).
One of the first things my wife, Susan, and I did after getting married was to rent a plot in the nearby Dartmouth College community garden. That really started it all - in the summer of 1980. It was a pretty standard garden with vegetable seedlings from the local nursery (the tomatoes were Better Boy!). And here I am, more than 30 years and nearly as many gardens later, as excited about digging the dirt, planting and harvesting things now as I was back then.
I've been pretty lucky to have joined the Seed Savers Exchange in the mid 1980s, just as so many wonderful heirloom varieties were emerging from root cellars, farms and garden sheds, making their way back into circulation through the efforts of the many SSE members. Such luck included being sent seeds of tomatoes like Anna Russian and Cherokee Purple (sent to me with no name, just a description) and Lillian's Yellow Heirloom. The realization of what treasures these and hundreds of other varieties were, the urgency to grow them, see them, taste them and share the seeds with others, was what drove me deeper and deeper into this hobby. It is an adventure that always seems to have an exciting new chapter with new things to discover and share. And it is such adventures that I hope to share with you on this website, and in my blog.
One of the first things my wife, Susan, and I did after getting married was to rent a plot in the nearby Dartmouth College community garden. That really started it all - in the summer of 1980. It was a pretty standard garden with vegetable seedlings from the local nursery (the tomatoes were Better Boy!). And here I am, more than 30 years and nearly as many gardens later, as excited about digging the dirt, planting and harvesting things now as I was back then.
I've been pretty lucky to have joined the Seed Savers Exchange in the mid 1980s, just as so many wonderful heirloom varieties were emerging from root cellars, farms and garden sheds, making their way back into circulation through the efforts of the many SSE members. Such luck included being sent seeds of tomatoes like Anna Russian and Cherokee Purple (sent to me with no name, just a description) and Lillian's Yellow Heirloom. The realization of what treasures these and hundreds of other varieties were, the urgency to grow them, see them, taste them and share the seeds with others, was what drove me deeper and deeper into this hobby. It is an adventure that always seems to have an exciting new chapter with new things to discover and share. And it is such adventures that I hope to share with you on this website, and in my blog.