INDIANAPOLIS — The Indianapolis Public Library’s Seed Service has returned for the 2023 spring and summer season.
“The seed library is a library within a library,” Glory Perez, with IndyPL said.
The Seed Library Service allows Hoosiers to take home free vegetable, flower and herb seeds to plant in at-home gardens. The library limits 25 seed packets per household.

The Seed Library will offer over 40 different seeds including:
- Marigold
- Milkweed
- Sunflower
- Basil
- Cilantro
- Oregano
- Turnip
- Carrots
- Cucumbers
- Green beans
- Peppers
- Pumpkins
- Zucchini squash
- Tomatoes
- And more
Seeds will be offered at 19 public library branches.
Perez said some of the library branches offering the seeds are in food deserts and having these seeds in a big deal for the neighborhood.
“When you're in the food desert, access to fresh produce is very limited and it's very far for people to go so having this is like a great asset and providing like a start to growing your own food, encouraging food sovereignty. We have a food pantry but there is no fresh produce so this is a great added asset," Perez said.
In addition to the Seed Library, some branches will also offer gardening classes. The classes will cover gardening basics, how to plant seeds indoors and when it’s safe to plant the seeds.
For more information on which branches are participating and what seeds will be available, click here.
-
Vera Bradley pauses Annual Outlet Sale, plans 2027 return
Vera Bradley is sitting out its Annual Outlet Sale in 2026, saying it wants to reimagine the event before bringing it back in 2027
Airfare expected to rise as oil prices climb, due to conflict in the Middle East
Conflict in the Middle East has driven oil prices higher and consumers have already seen the effect at the gas pump. Experts say the impact may soon reach airline ticket prices.
Over 500 gather for community meeting with Indy Action Coalition
Over 500 Indianapolis residents gathered to discuss a new homelessness law and ICE enforcement at a community meeting on Thursday.
Southeast side tenants looking for answers after major flooding in apartment
Residents paid renters' insurance along with their rent each month. So, they thought they were protected. Until property managers told them their renters' insurance went towards the building.