10 Indigenous Corn Cultivars

Try your hand at planting these vibrant corn cultivars with roots in Indigenous cultures, and save the seeds for future generations.

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by Amyrose Foll
Many Indigenous corn cultivars have a nutty flavor because they don’t contain the same sugar content as the commercial hybrids commonly available in grocery stores.

Try your hand at planting these vibrant corn cultivars with roots in Indigenous cultures, and save the seeds for future generations. 

Before heading to your favorite local spot to pick up the useful, but not very inspiring, F1 hybrid sweet corn cultivars, consider making some space for something a little more unexpected in this year’s garden. Believe it or not, what most people commonly group together as “Indian Corn” is actually a wonderfully diverse range of cultivars, and all are edible. We’ve just developed an amnesia of sorts here in the United States. To be completely honest, all corn is, in fact, Indian corn. The simple beauty of corn transformed meals around the globe with the Columbian exchange. Sister corn deserves time in the spotlight for all her contributions to our nourishment.

Biodiversity

Comprising less than 5 percent of the world’s population, Indigenous people protect 80 percent of global biodiversity. With the weather extremes we’re experiencing, many of these old cultivars that our farming ancestors curated for us may hold answers to the climate crisis. Some of these plants have been adapted to need little water, or to have short life cycles. They may very well be the answer to evolving our agriculture to change with the climate.

Cultural Preservation

  • Updated on Sep 13, 2023
  • Originally Published on May 6, 2021
Tagged with: Amyrose Foll, biodiversity, Bofo, Cherokee, corn, cultivars, garden planning, indigenous, Kulli
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