Just one single species of plant can positively change the world in so many wonderful productive agricultural ways. To make the world more fruitful and abundant, crop enrichment could light the way by harnessing new species of plants outside of what we currently use. The one crop that no one wants could be a weed somewhere. Aligning with the potential of new crops and healthy foods is a direct path to bringing better food and improved human health. Weeds are very good at this. I view them as nature’s suggestion box. I cultivated many of them and made some slight selections in the process. Even the dandelion has been selected to some degree. It’s picture is featured prominently on all lawn herbicide bottles.
Evidently cultivating the weedy plants is also one of the most controversial activities I was involved with. My nursery was very small scale and rarely made a dent into this new food crop category. Nothing caught on to any large degree. I began to think that possibly I was standing in the wrong field alone and isolated like many of my weed friends. Every now and then people have opinions they like to share on what is good or bad. There were some weeds that fell into the legal category of invasive species. I stayed clear of them in commerce, but secretly I grew a few to see what the noise was about. Like one of my employees who had a pot growing operation behind a secret door in his closet, I was hiding my weeds in plain sight. I mean how many times do people look at the plants in the cracks of the sidewalks. No one cares about those plants. I would dig them up and bring them to my nursery and put them in prop trays. I always go to the U.S.D.A. definition of weed as ‘a plant some where and at some time people find objectionable.’ Frankly, I found none of them objectionable. Framed by this, the long-winded emails and pencil written complaints on lined binder paper made me smile.
Biodiversity is a word we cuddle up to. To wander outside into the weed category is a great joy but is thought of as a threat to biodiversity. The plants are sometimes found on this isolated island of potential food plants. Here are two.

Such is the case for the hardy citrus species called trifoliate orange, Poncirus trifoliata. It has been used as understock for citrus and an ornamental plant for over hundred years in the United States. No one has looked at it in any serious way other than a novelty fruit plant with thorns and a zig zag growth pattern. There is some renewed interest in it again as a fruit producer. The quality of the fruit is questionable, which can be packed full of seeds. In Michigan, it was not a particularly easy plant to establish. However once set, the plants took off after the fifth year. Today my hardy oranges are left alone on a hillside and struggling in a mix of goldenrod and an active groundhog colony. It is alone and far from any form of citrus. Yet far outside its cultivated range also offers opportunities in that there are no pests or diseases that affect it. It grows like a …..weed. I had to protect it with a mesh guard because the deer would nibble on the foliage trying to miss the giant thorns. The last time I checked there were over a dozen states prohibiting citrus plants being shipped from outside of its state. Likely we will see more of this as certain historical ranges change of crop plants and disease, and insects make it unfavorable to grow the crop anymore. With imports soon behind it signals the end of certain fruit farms in different parts of the United States. Although I have no fruiting plants, I feel enlivened every time I see them. I have no idea on what I am doing in the world of citrus. I’m from Michigan. Yet already I see differences in terms of hardiness and growth patterns. I also see this same plant being grown by other weed lovers like me. Some of them are secret about it and others are full of bravado and confidence. I stand in the middle of this field and wonder what its future will offer to the fruit growers of my state and beyond. It is only a rootstock let to grow after a real citrus orchard is abandoned. That sounds promising to me. Alone and free to grow.

To mention you are breeding and selecting autumn olive is controversial. It is one of those taboo subjects and can only be done in certain circles. Once I almost got kicked out of a dinner I was at because the landowner was livid about autumn olives. He only loved native plants. I said it was a good juice plant rich in anthocyanins. The weed in me was speaking. It’s high anthocyanin compounds along with its rich vitamins and minerals have huge potential as a perennial crop plant. People are now harvesting it and enjoying the fruit that once was considered ‘wildlife food.’ Other related species like the goumi is also considered desirable and said to be not as weedy although no one planted millions of them like the conservation districts did to test that theory. For me finding the deep red selections and heavier fruiting plants was both rewarding and an eye opener to its value. It shows the potential of going past the 100 x times more than the tomato mark. My little gene pool was found at my family’s abandoned Christmas tree farm wedged between the scotch pines and white spruce. These were loners in a population hidden from view. These isolated plants were filled with promises which can be used as an energy drink and a means to fight cancer. The nitrogen fixing capabilities also provide additional benefits in tree crop plantings as an understory plant. The birds and mammals know this already, which is why you see it everywhere. They recognize its benefits. Now it is our turn. Just some slight selective varieties and this weed will become less objectionable over time. For now, it is a closeted love affair hidden from view and talked about in secret circles on social media under the name Elaeagnaceae, Few notice but some say it is a great fixer upper in the plant world.

The autumnberry is a recapitulation of the now forgotten autumn olive for human use. This was a chance seedling with darker fruit with good yields found many years ago at my families farm. Using selections based on high levels of lycopene along with the culinary means of delivering that goodness be it juice, syrup or supplements could make this a profitable shrub crop. Only a weed can do this. Of course some negotiations with regulatory will be needed or a change in the laws on its cultivation for human use. Oh oh. I just thought of this. Prepare to be met with lined binder paper.

Enjoy. Kenneth Asmus



































































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