SurvivalSeeds4Patriots Announces Sales of More than 10,000 Liberty Seed Vaults Since Mid-2012

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As the 2013 planting season approaches, SurvivalSeeds4Patriots is announcing that it has sold more than 10,000 of its Liberty Seed Vaults since launching the product in the summer of 2012. The Liberty Seed Vault enables people to grow their own food indefinitely.

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For those who have not yet established a garden, or who want a larger variety of seeds than have been produced by the plants they’ve grown so far, the Liberty Seed Vault is a way to get started.

When SurvivalSeeds4Patriots unveiled its new product – the Liberty Seed Vault – in the summer of 2012, company officials were anticipating significant growth. But even they did not expect that only seven months later they’d be making this announcement. The company announced today that more than 10,000 Liberty Seed Vaults have been sold, which represents more than 500,000 non-GMO heirloom survival seeds.

SurvivalSeeds4Patriots developed the Liberty Seed Vault because the company believes that seeds and a garden are the only guarantees of an ongoing food source and the only things that will enable families to achieve food independence.

Packaged in an air-tight metal storage container, the Liberty Seed Vault includes more than 5,400 open-pollinated, non-genetically modified, heirloom seeds from 20 varieties of vegetable heirlooms. Each order is accompanied by four informative guides and a 100 percent money-back guarantee.

A stockpile of non-hybrid vegetable seeds, plus the new seeds that will accompany the plants that they produce in their gardens, will enable people to feed themselves and their families forever. And, this garden food will be less expensive, more nutritious and better tasting than food purchased from grocery stores.

Among the vegetable seeds people can plant in order to have food year ‘round are cabbage, lettuce, tomatoes, a wide variety of beans, carrots, corn, broccoli, Brussels sprouts, squash, melons, celery, cucumbers, eggplant, okra, onions, peas, pumpkins, radishes, spinach, zucchini, asparagus, beets, bell peppers and many more.

Plant growers should time their harvests based on the individual plant’s method of seed dispersal; clean the seeds and spread them out to dry; store them in packets, glass jars or other containers; label the packets and containers by variety and date; and store them in a cool or cold, dark and dry place.    

For those who have not yet established a garden, or who want a larger variety of seeds than have been produced by the plants they’ve grown so far, the Liberty Seed Vault is a way to get started.

Check out this Power4Patriots blog to learn a little known indoor garden trick.

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Frank Bates
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