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    Planetary
    VoiceReport LogoVoiceReport
    The cloudNutrition & Food SecurityMahua & Local EconomyTraditional & Wild FoodsTraditional Farming & RightsRights & Seed RevivalPreserving Traditional Seeds
    🌾

    A dimension within Rights & Seed Revival

    Preserving Traditional Seeds

    This theme explores the importance of saving and cultivating traditional seeds for sustainable agriculture and livelihoods.

    150 voices speak to this

    Dimensions within this theme

    Each dimension splits this theme further — keep drilling to see how it breaks down.

    Community Voice Analysis
    An AI-powered summary of 100 submissions for this prompt.

    Positive

    Overall Community Sentiment

    The Voice Summary

    In your area, citizens are overwhelmingly committed to preserving traditional farming practices and their invaluable indigenous seeds 🌿. They highlight the importance of cultivating diverse crops using rain-fed methods and ancestral knowledge, a legacy passed down through generations. There is a strong collective desire to safeguard this agricultural heritage, ensuring the continuity of nutritious, locally adapted crops and sustainable farming for the future 💧💡.

    Dominant Themes

    Traditional Seed Preservation
    Indigenous Crop Cultivation
    Generational Farming Practices
    Rain-fed Agriculture
    Local Crop Diversity

    Actionable Recommendations

    • 🌱 🏦 🗺Establish community seed banks or networks to formally support and document the traditional seed varieties currently being preserved by farmers.
    • 👨 🏫 💧Develop educational programs that share traditional farming techniques, especially those focused on rain-fed and organic cultivation, to ensure intergenerational knowledge transfer.
    • 🏆 🌾 🤝Recognize and provide incentives for farmers who continue to practice traditional, low-input farming methods and preserve indigenous crop diversity.

    Synthesised from the stories

    AI-synthesised pieces woven from many community voices on this theme. They may contain errors or interpretation — they're a reflection of the stories, not a record of fact.

    Voice Reports

    By Socratus

    Voice Reports turns spoken civic voices — in any language, from anywhere — into a living, searchable chorus of collective wisdom.

    Speak — Share your voice

    From the Socratus Lab

    • LOKA
    • wystem.ai
    • Voice Reports · you are here

    Explore

    How it works
    The Pulse
    Today

    Part of Socratus

    Socratus Collective Wisdom Corporation

    “Midwives for collective wisdom — surfacing the latent capacity within communities to survive and flourish.”
    Visit Socratus

    Join the commons

    A quiet note when the chorus has something worth hearing.

    Get the Daily Report by Email
    Subscribe to receive a daily summary of community voices directly in your inbox.
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    Socratus Collective Wisdom Corporation © 2026 · All Rights Reserved.

    NewsletterTermsPrivacyBrand & Press
    Planetary
    🧭 Action recipe· Farming for Resilience

    Save the Seeds That Know the Rain

    By preserving our traditional, rain-fed seeds and planting them with care, we ensure food for our families and fodder for our animals.

    🧭 Action recipe· Farming for Resilience

    Preserve Your Seeds, Cultivate Diversity

    We carefully save seeds from our diverse crops like chickpeas, lentils, and mustard, ensuring we can grow them again next year and maintain our livelihood.

    🧭 Action recipe· Farming for Resilience

    Save Your Seeds for the Next Season's Harvest

    By carefully collecting and preserving seeds from our first harvest, we ensure a second, nutritious crop and maintain our traditional farming methods for generations.

    🧭 Action recipe· Farming for Resilience

    Ancestral Seeds, Diverse Harvests

    By cultivating a variety of crops, preserving ancestral seeds, and exploring animal husbandry, we build a resilient livelihood for our community.

    Where these voices come from

    ODISHA, INDIA47 voices UTTAR PRADESH, INDIA26 voices JHARKHAND, INDIA17 voices MADHYA PRADESH, INDIA13 voices CHHATTISGARH, INDIA11 voices

    Voices here

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We save and sow our traditional seeds. Such as chickpea, sorghum, Bhadi, pearl millet, etc.

    — Vijay kanesh · Alirajpur, Madhya Pradesh

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We preserve old seeds for sowing work, which explicitly includes Moong, Kili, and Mustard.

    — Vijay Kumar bhardwaj · Baloda Bazar, Chhattisgarh

    🌱 💧 🤲

    We cultivate seeds such as chickpea, lentil, mustard, and horse gram using traditional, possibly rain-fed, farming methods. We preserve these seeds and cultivate them using this traditional agricultural practice.

    — Laxmi Sahu

    🌱 👴 🌾

    We have traditional seeds here like Saadia, paddy, pigeon pea, semi-native gourds, Karaiguta, Chipra, etc. We preserve these every year and cultivate them using old traditional methods without irrigation.

    — Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh

    🌱 🤲 ✨

    We save stable seeds and kuluth seeds are valuable for our family. We have old seeds like millet, kuluth, moong. We sell them and use them as food.

    — Basanti · Dashapalla, Nayagarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 📜

    We save our traditional seeds that we have inherited.

    — Vijay kanesh · Alirajpur, Madhya Pradesh

    🌱 🤲 🌿

    Chickpeas and gumbra are our old seeds, which we preserve and then sow.

    — Vinita Singh Yadav · Mukasim, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 👨‍👩‍👧 💎

    We have traditional moong and urad dal. We cultivate them generation after generation. I will tell you what we have preserved.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Karamdihi, Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    Yes, we cultivate and preserve traditional seeds.

    — Selina Pangi

    🌱 🤲 🏡

    We save seeds at our location and keep them for our family. And saving old seeds in a traditional way is our

    — Anil Pargi

    🌱 🤲 💎

    Yes, we save our local seeds. The most precious seeds for the family are wheat, chickpeas, peas, paddy, etc. Seeds are precious.

    — Vimala

    👴 🌾 🤲

    Our ancestors have been cultivating Kodo, Barnyard, Foxtail, Finger millet, Horse gram, and Barley since ancient times, which are very nutritious. We always preserve their seeds and cultivate them every year.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌾 🕰️ 🛡️

    We have the oldest seeds of pulses, oilseeds, and rice that we have preserved.

    — Sunil oraon · Ranchi, Jharkhand

    🌾 🤲 🏺

    We cultivate paddy, wheat, and pulses in our village and want to preserve this as a heritage.

    — bachcha lal · Shahganj, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 👴 🌾

    Here, we cultivate Sawa, Medon, Mujhri, Kodo, and pulses using the 'Batririri' method. We also store the seeds at home for the following year and then re-sow them in the field; this practice is a legacy from our ancestors.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    In our region, we save and conserve our local seeds such as indigenous oilseed seeds, indigenous pulse seeds, and paddy seeds.

    — Sunil oraon · Ranchi, Jharkhand

    👴 🤲 🌱

    I cultivate pulse crops without irrigation. We save pulse seeds, among which horse gram, black gram, and pigeon pea are the oldest varieties. We save these seeds for cultivation every year. Our ancestors used to cultivate using manure and traditional ploughs.

    — DASHARATH SINGH

    🌱 🤲 👨‍👩‍👧

    Yes, I collect my own seeds. Mung and Black Gram are the most valuable seeds for our family. I have horse gram, black gram, bajra (pearl millet) and Mugeisal rice as old seeds. For us...

    — gadadhar dash

    👴 🌱 🤲

    We preserve the pulse crops that we have received from our ancestors.

    — Sunil oraon · Ranchi, Jharkhand

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We also preserve seeds in a traditional way.

    — Sunil oraon · Ranchi, Jharkhand

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We have inherited the seeds of Bhaadi, Kodra, Bati, Jowar.

    — Kachala Choudhary

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    Yes, we save old seeds.

    — Kachala Choudhary

    🌱 🔒 🕰️

    We have preserved various items such as moong, beans, and gourds from ancient times.

    — S Guruteli · Sindhiguda, Malkangiri, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 📜

    We cultivate zero-irrigation crops, including pulses and oilseeds, and also conserve them, as they are part of our heritage.

    — Sunil oraon · Ranchi, Jharkhand

    🌾 💧 🤲

    We cultivated rainfed crops like pigeon pea, mung bean, and black gram, and will continue to cultivate and preserve them for the future.

    — bachcha lal · Shahganj, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    👴 🌱 🔒

    Nature preserves the entire seeds. We also cultivate and sow what our ancestors were sowing, and preserve it as seeds.

    — Ram Maravi

    🌱 🤲 👴

    Yes, pulses are cultivated in this. According to our ancestors, we also preserve seeds.

    — Jagannath Baraik · Bayang, Seraikela-Kharsawan, Jharkhand

    🌽 🤲 👶

    We want to preserve rain-fed crops like maize and jute, which are part of our old heritage, for future generations.

    — bachcha lal · Shahganj, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    Yes, we grow other crops and also preserve seeds like black gram, pigeon pea, and green gram.

    — Jagannath Baraik · Ranchi, Jharkhand

    🌱 🌧️ 🌾

    We do traditional farming. We save rain-fed seeds and cultivate crops like sorghum and chickpea.

    — Vijay kanesh · Alirajpur, Madhya Pradesh

    🌱 🔄 🌾

    Previously, we used to cultivate all crops like moong, urad, and kulthi, and we want to continue doing so in the future.

    — Jyoti Senapati

    🌱 📜 🤲

    In traditional farming methods, to preserve seeds, we need to conserve the oldest and indigenous varieties of seeds.

    — Ram Maravi · Dindori, Madhya Pradesh

    🌱 💪 ☀️

    We still have traditional seeds like Kodo, Kutki, Maize, Sorghum, Kulthi, Arhar, etc., which we sow using old methods even without irrigation facilities. Even then, our crops ripen.

    — Rupesh Maravi · Mandla, Madhya Pradesh

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We do farming. We save some seeds beforehand and then cultivate. This way, we get many crops, including green gram, black gram, and pigeon pea.

    — Ulapi Sahu · Balangir, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 🗓️

    Here, we cultivate paddy, sawa, medon, and mijhri. We store sawa, medon, and mijhri at home for sowing in the next year. Additionally, among pulses, we have kurthi and baturi, which we also store and sow the following year.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🚜 🌱 📜

    Our plows and bullocks till the fields, we sow millet, maize, make furrows, and plant small seeds, and also save seeds for the next year. This is a legacy from our ancestors, which we still have today and which we utilize.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌾 🐂 🏡

    Sawa, Medo, Mijhri are our traditional crops, which our ancestors used to cultivate by plowing with bullocks and a plough. They consumed these crops throughout the year and saved seeds in their homes for the next year's sowing. We still practice farming today.

    — Ram Kumari · Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 🤲 👶

    Non-irrigated crops like maize, jute, and various other types that we want to preserve for our coming generation.

    — bachcha lal · Shahganj, Sonbhadra, Uttar Pradesh

    🌱 🤲 🌾

    We traditionally keep the seeds and cultivate in the coming year.

    — Gitanjali Bhoi · Karamdihi, Sundargarh, Odisha

    🌱 🤲 💀

    These seeds have been inherited by us through many generations. We preserve them with the thought that they might not be available to us in the future or could become extinct.

    — Sunil oraon · Ranchi, Jharkhand

    Sources & credits

    The voices in this theme were gathered by these organisations through their community reports.

    • Atmashakti Trust144 voices

      “Do you practice zero irrigation second crop and follow traditional farming practices and seed protection?” · “If you or your women’s groups are given a seed capital of INR 20,000, what enterprise will you choose?”

    🏺Heritage Seed Preservation40 voices
    🏜️Dryland & Organic Farming37 voices
    🌾Sustainable Crop Cultivation31 voices
    🌽Traditional Crop Heritage18 voices
    🌱Local Seed Biodiversity17 voices
    🍚Paddy Seed Conservation7 voices