
Grasses & Grain Seeds - Johnny's Selected Seeds
Grow grasses, millet, sorghum, and grains for grain production, livestock forage, or as cover crops. Organic options. Non-GMO. 100% guaranteed.
Heirloom Grain Seeds – Heritage Harvest Seed
All of our heirloom grain seed varieties are natural, untreated, non hybrid, open pollinated, non GMO seeds. We have over 800 varieties of rare and endangered heirloom vegetable, flower, herb and grain seeds.
Non-GMO & Organic Grain Seeds for Farming | Albert Lea Seed
Small Grains. Look to Albert Lea seed for diverse small grains including rye, barley, and wheat for diverse crop rotations. Buy online now.
Grains - Page 1 - Annie's Heirloom Seeds
A self-seeding whole grain traditionally cultivated for seeds. Chia produces leafy plants that reach 18-24” tall with purple flower spikes. Valued for medicinal and nutritional properties. Seeds are protein rich and high in omega-3 fatty acids...
Wheat Seed - Farm Seed & Cover Crops - Johnny's Selected Seeds
Use fast-growing spring wheat for erosion control and to suppress weeds. The hullless wheat seeds are also excellent for milling and baking. Organic. Non-GMO.
Seeds - Tractor Supply Co.
Seeds at Tractor Supply Co. Buy online, free in-store pickup. Shop today!
Heirloom Grain Seeds
Cereal grass and its edible grain, used to make rye bread and rye whiskey, as livestock feed, and as a pasture plant. Native to South Asia, today it is grown extensively in Europe, Asia, and North America.
Heirloom Grains – Mary's Heirloom Seeds
We currently offer over 1,000 varieties of Heirloom, open-pollinated, non-gmo & non-hybrid seeds. Mary has signed the Safe Seed pledge & the Declaration of Seed Freedom.
Amazon.com: Grain Seeds
Wheatland Heirloom Grain Sorghum/Milo - 100 Seeds - Rare Heirloom & Open-Pollinated Variety - Great for Making Gluten-Free Flour, Non-GMO Seeds for Planting Outdoors in the Garden, Thresh Seed Company
Seed vs. Grain — What’s the Difference?
Mar 11, 2024 · Seeds are embryonic plants encased in protective outer shells, used for growing new plants or as food, whereas grains are specific types of seeds harvested from cereal crops like wheat or corn, primarily used for human and animal consumption.