Culture TikTok creators are sharing videos of themselves illegally launching seed bombs at vacant lots - “You just literally yeet them at the soil”

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TikTok creators are sharing videos of themselves illegally launching seed bombs at vacant lots, and they say it's part of a 'radical' war on urban eyesores and racial inequality​

Joshua Zitser
Aug 7, 2021, 7:12 AM
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  • Seed bombing is when people throw capsules containing seeds and fertilizers at vacant lots in urban areas.
  • Videos showing seed bombing have millions of views on TikTok.
  • It might seem uncontroversial, but it's technically illegal and, according to TikTok creators, is fundamentally political.

"Illicit," "radical," and "revolutionary" are just some of the words TikTok's guerrilla gardeners used to describe the work that they do.

By throwing seed bombs (capsules consisting of seeds and fertilizer) at vacant lots, the green-thumbed social media stars often break the law and flout local regulations.

Several of these creators told Insider that they are engaging in a righteous act of civil disobedience by launching the horticultural grenades. And that's why they're proud to publish them on TikTok, often to hundreds of thousands of viewers.

"It's political," said Ellen Miles, an environmental activist with over 50,000 TikTok followers, who goes by @OctaviaChillon the video-sharing platform. "And it's direct action that changes things for the better," she added.

Seed bombing's rebellious roots​

Creating a seed bomb is simple, and TikTok is rife with tutorials on how to make them.

"You can wet some red clay powder, mix it with compost, mix the seeds in, which should be native to the region and noninvasive, and roll it into little balls and let them dry out," Miles told Insider. "Then you just literally yeet them at the soil."

Seed bombs are believed to have originated in Ancient Japan. They were known as Tsuchi Dango, or "earth dumplings." They were also used by some Indigenous North American tribes.

But the practice of throwing these capsules as a form of rebellion has its roots in 1970s New York.

In 1973, a group of urbanites living in New York City's Lower East Side was desperate to transform the decaying urban jungle around them. Unable to convince local authorities to act, the group designed prototypal seed bombs to toss over fences and into vacant lots.

Initially, the Green Guerillas used condoms filled with tomato seeds. They did this to reclaim urban land, and make community gardens accessible to as many people as possible.

Alaina Wood, also known as @thegarbagequeen, is a sustainability communicator with almost 200,000 TikTok followers. She told Insider that the motivation for seed bombing is the wish to bring nature to disadvantaged communities.

"Many urban areas don't have green spaces, particularly for communities of color," Wood explained. "So, the premise is that they are going to turn these vacant spaces into something that will be useful and helpful for the community."

Jeremiah Jones, an environmental activist with 13,000 followers on TikTok, said this is partly what inspired him to get involved with guerrilla gardening.

"When we spend time in green space, you'll see that our health, emotionally, and our physical health depends on natural green space. So it's about amplifying that and making sure that everybody has access to that," Jones told Insider.

'I wanted to do something tangible and immediate'​

Miles, 28, who runs an organization called Nature is a Human Right alongside her TikTok account, was so eager to remedy the problem of unequal access to nature that she left her job as a creative strategist to focus on it full-time.

She told Insider that her mission feels particularly urgent because the pandemic has exacerbated the negative effects of nature deprivation.

"Most of the things that are lethal comorbidities for COVID-19 are things that are fueled by being nature-deprived," Miles explained. "So heart and lung problems, diabetes, things like that, are all significantly worse if you live in a nature-deprived area. Then also, obviously, lockdowns have impacted people's mental health if they didn't have a park or a garden to escape to."

Miles had tried to improve access to these spaces by using "top-down" approaches, like speaking to local authorities and petitioning the United Nations, but found that using social media was more efficient.

"I got quite frustrated with the lack of pace at which things were going to change and I wanted to do something tangible and immediate," she said. "That's why I started guerilla gardening, and seed bombing, and started obviously posting about it on TikTok where the response was mad."

Miles' videos have found a large and dedicated audience; her posts have more than one million likes on TikTok.

Her success is part of a wider trend; seed bombing and guerrilla gardening videos perform particularly well on TikTok.

The hashtags #seedbombs, #seedbomb, and #seedbombing collectively have over 5.4 million views on the social media platform. #guerrillagardening and #guerillagardening have over 10 million views in total.

Gen Z loves the 'illicit' nature of seed bombing​

According to Kim Karlsrud, the co-founder of the COMMONstudio, a creative agency that distributes seed bomb vending machines around the US, Gen Zers on TikTok are attracted to seed bombing videos because its transgressive.

"There's something kind of sexy and compelling about illicitly planting seeds," she told Insider.

Seedbombing is technically illegal in most parts of the US, according to Conservation Jobs, but few people have ever been prosecuted for it.

Some creators avoid the slim possibility of being caught by wearing balaclavas and doing it in the dead of night, whereas others wear high-visibility jackets to look inconspicuous.

Jones, who goes by @prophet.jeremiah on TikTok, does neither of these things. He said he is at peace with the fact that he could one day be arrested.

"I understand that might be the consequences of the actions that I'm taking, and that's okay because those actions are advancing values that not only I believe in but I think benefit everybody," he said.

Jones said that guerrilla gardening is "revolutionary," and he would urge those thinking of partaking not to be put off by the legal risks. "I'd thank you for getting in the trenches," he said.

Flower power is rising, and the revolution will not be televised — it will be posted on Tiktok.
 
Imagine if they start doing it with kudzu. Oh fuck.
Or bloodgrass.
There’s also several grass species that actually increase fire outbreaks because they burn easily, since their seeds spread via fire.

So while it seems (and in most cases is) mostly harmless, there’s some good reasons why this is illegal.
 
Or bloodgrass.
There’s also several grass species that actually increase fire outbreaks because they burn easily, since their seeds spread via fire.

So while it seems (and in most cases is) mostly harmless, there’s some good reasons why this is illegal.
I mean yeah, lobbing destructive invasive seeds is bad, but the article mentions they're specifically using seeds from plants native to their areas.

Plus it's not like developers don't do their fair share of spreading destructive invasive species coughBRADFORD PEARcough (I swear every strip mall and McMansion ghetto here smells like a damn clam bake every spring. Seriously why the fuck would you clear cut all the native trees on a lot just to jam it full of McMansions with a few nasty invasives like bradford pear scattered about).
 
I really wouldn’t mind some sort of ordinance that gave say landowners a tax break for maintaining their empty lots as green spaces prior to re/development. They’d have to be given immunity from lawsuits from those accessing it, of course. Yes, I know, the locals would destroy it, but other than that...
 
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Imagine if they start doing it with kudzu. Oh fuck.
Wouldn't it be awfully convenient for China to start fucking with america by using their social media app TikTok to start encouraging american teens to do something stupid?
Thankfully American teenagers are well known for their critical thinking skills and rationality.
 
This is nothing more than joggers culturally appropriating what John ‘Johnny Appleseed’ Chapman was doing 220 years ago.
 
I really wouldn’t mind some sort of ordinance that gave say landowners a tax break for maintaining their empty lots as green spaces prior to re/development. They’d have to be given immunity from lawsuits from those accessing it, of course. Yes, I know, the locals would destroy it, but other than that...
I'd go further and say mandate a minimum number of lots existing as green space with as many native plants as possible. I hate seeing cool lots destroyed and jammed full of more shitty McMansions, townhouses, or strip malls. Plus despite it being the south and 90+ for at least half the year developers here seem hellbent on chopping down every last tree so they can jam as much crap as possible onto the lot. Its godawful and I swear it makes me want to go full Princess Mononoke.
 
"It's political," said Ellen Miles, an environmental activist with over 50,000 TikTok followers, who goes by @OctaviaChillon the video-sharing platform. "And it's direct action that changes things for the better," she added.
If we flew one of those Hellfire missiles with swords attached at Ellen Miles and made a Tiktok video about it, it'd also be political and direct action that would change things for the better.
Do you think we'd get a nice story about it in Insider?
 
This is nothing more than joggers culturally appropriating what John ‘Johnny Appleseed’ Chapman was doing 220 years ago.
He was planting cider orchards for a big cut of the profits. Remember, capitalism is bad.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: TowinKarz
Imagine if they start doing it with kudzu. Oh fuck.

Or bloodgrass.
There’s also several grass species that actually increase fire outbreaks because they burn easily, since their seeds spread via fire.

So while it seems (and in most cases is) mostly harmless, there’s some good reasons why this is illegal.
"They want a war? We'll give em' war!"
 
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Reactions: Pocket Dragoon
I have no problem with what they're doing and I definitely think we need more allotments and community gardens.

The problem I have here is that they think that planting tomato seeds makes them revolutionaries.
I don't mind it; but with people being able to buy pretty much any type of seeds off of Amazon (or other places) and have them shipped to their home, I wish with futility that they would do some research before bombing places with potentially invasive species of plants that could fuck up their local ecosystem.
 
  • Agree
Reactions: The-Mad-Asshatter
Who is going to weed and maintain these green spaces once they are created? They do understand that a pretty garden space is one that is cultivated. Perhaps they haven't truly been in nature and don't understand that weeds are generally dominant because they are so hardy. You might get a few pretty flowers, but you'll get even more unsightly weeds if you don't actually maintain the space.

That is actually going to harm the neighborhood rather than help it. Why are all the younger generation "activists" so fucking lazy? Throwing a seed bomb and tweeting about it isn't a revolutionary act. It's not even a useful act.
 
Good job faggots, you made the poor plants that grow from these seeds turn into stunted shrubs due to lack of soil access and water. If you really cared for this idea more than faggy nonexistent internet clout and doing whatever your favorite influencer does like a good little hive minded drone you'd grow your own garden, but that takes time and effort, not to mention an attention span longer than that of a goldfish.
 
That's why I said yeet them at monoculture lawns, not people who actually allow more than one plant to exist in their yards.

If you have that perfectly manicured, poison filled, McMansion HOA ass horrorshow that crawled out of the uncanny valley on a Franzia bender you deserve as many native seeds yeeted at that shit as possible.
Whatever they lob in there isn't going to get established on a well kept lawn unless they are weeds. Dandelion, canada thistle, morning glory, kudzu, etc. Invasive non-natives.

If they do, some 2,4-D will likely sort it out quick.

I don't understand your obsession with fucking with other people's shit. Leave them alone you prick.
 
Who is going to weed and maintain these green spaces once they are created? They do understand that a pretty garden space is one that is cultivated. Perhaps they haven't truly been in nature and don't understand that weeds are generally dominant because they are so hardy. You might get a few pretty flowers, but you'll get even more unsightly weeds if you don't actually maintain the space.

That is actually going to harm the neighborhood rather than help it. Why are all the younger generation "activists" so fucking lazy? Throwing a seed bomb and tweeting about it isn't a revolutionary act. It's not even a useful act.
Nah weeds are pretty cool and good for bees. We need to stop trying to monopolize plants growing outside and autistically maintaining what few plants we allow to exist to the point theh look fake.

I'm not sure why theres such strong negative reaction to this. Yeah tiktok and the buzzword nonsense about racism is retarded, but otherwise this is something that's pretty benign at worst as long as they're using native seeds like they claim.
Whatever they lob in there isn't going to get established on a well kept lawn unless they are weeds. Dandelion, canada thistle, morning glory, kudzu, etc. Invasive non-natives.

If they do, some 2,4-D will likely sort it out quick.

I don't understand your obsession with fucking with other people's shit. Leave them alone you prick.
Dandelion is dank, seriously you can eat every part of it and it's good for wildlife and blowing the puffs is rad. Monoculture is fake and gay.
 
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