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Could A Beautiful $5 Catalogue Save America's Oldest Seed Company?

DiscoBiscuit

weed fiend
Veteran
Posted: 9/7/11 09:32 AM ET

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Barbare Melera , Landreth Seed Company , Media News



Anybody want to order a gorgeous seed catalog for $5?
Or, better, invest in a seed company?

This story behind this offer --- this extremely urgent offer --- begins in 2003.
After 21 years working in venture capital, Barbara Melera was more than ready to move on. But when she had lunch with a friend who also worked in venture capital, she expected nothing more than a pleasant hour of griping and gossip. Instead, her friend had a life-changing idea.
"I know a company you could buy," she said, "but if you buy it, we won't be friends."

"It's in terrible shape. And you'll jump in --- and drown."

"Why?"
Her friend wasn't exaggerating. The company owned no computers. Shipping labels were created on a Smith-Corona electric typewriter. The accounting department was still using file cards.

But Landreth Seed was a sacred name in American gardening. Founded in 1784, it's America's oldest seedhouse. It introduced Americans to the zinnia (1798), the white-fleshed potato (1811) and the tomato (1820). It is revered for its vast range of heirloom seeds. With a new generation of gardeners sprouting up across America, Landreth was positioned to become the gold standard for high quality seeds.

So Melera and her husband Peter, a professor at the Robert Wood Johnson Medical School, bought Landreth. The years of 7-day, 80-hour weeks began. Business started improving. But the seed company needed seed capital --- and no VC or investor would step up.
In 2005, Melera told her story to Liz King, a wealthy Californian who had learned about Landreth from Melera's cousin. King was captivated. She loaned the company $75,000. And did it again. And again, until Landreth owed her $250,000, plus interest, due in five years.
The biggest issue: Liz King wanted her money. As Melera tells it, she asked King if she'd be willing to convert the loan to equity --- or give Landreth more time to repay it. King declined and turned the matter over to her lawyer.
Those turned out to be plague years. Landreth was battered by a busted economy, equipment failures, website glitches and a perpetual lack of capital. "You name it, there's been an issue," Melera says.

From here, it gets murky. Melera was too broke to hire a lawyer, so she handled King's 2010 demand for repayment herself. Or didn't handle it --- struggling to make payroll, she never approached King's lawyer with a repayment plan. She says she didn't receive notice of a court date or the judgment that she had defaulted. And so, she says, she was stunned to learn on August 31 that she had only 30 days to pay the loan plus interest --- or lose the business.
It's not as if Melera has spent the past year cultivating her home garden. She's actively pursued potential investors or lenders. She's written letters to foundations. She's courted the wealthy, cashed-out entrepreneurs, agriculture conglomerates and investment bankers. She raised not a dollar.

Barbara Melera is now reduced to an urgent request for help: "We need to sell 1 million catalogs to get rid of all of our debt, please help the oldest seed company in America!" That appeal has radiated from Landreth's Facebook page to gardeners across the country; in a matter of days, 2,000 people have paid $5 for Landreth's new catalog, a thing of beauty printed in America on quality paper. At this rate, selling a million catalogs in less than a month seems impossibly ambitious.

In fact, Landreth only needs to book a million catalog orders if it's intent on paying off, as Melera writes, "all of our debt." But her most urgent priority is Liz King's $250,000, plus interest. And to pay that off, Landreth needs to sell "only" 250,000 catalogs by the end of the month --- or sell fewer catalogs but have massive seed orders roll in.

Hearing Melera's story, you understand her wish for another year or two to settle Landreth's debts. The company was profitable last year on sales of $500,000; it will be more profitable this year on sales of $600,000. And as more Americans decide they don't want to grow vegetables from genetically modified seeds, sales of Landreth's authentic heirloom products could grow dramatically.

Reality check: Time, for Landreth, ends on October 1.

If I were Barbara Melera, I'd be sweating blood. To my surprise, she's both worried and guardedly optimistic. But then, she's been digging in the soil for 55 of her 61 years. She's got a very green thumb --- her gardens grow. And so, she believes, will this one.

=============

Note: Whatever her troubles as a business owner, Melera is a stellar gardener. I was pleased to note she uses the raised bed gardening method discussed here --- and adopted by many of you.


[cross-posted from HeadButler.com]


http://www.huffingtonpost.com/jesse-kornbluth/could-a-beautiful-5-catal_b_951939.html?ir=Media
 

smokefrogg

Active member
Veteran
...it sounds like melera, while a great gardener, is a horrible business person

this:
From here, it gets murky. Melera was too broke to hire a lawyer, so she handled King's 2010 demand for repayment herself. Or didn't handle it --- struggling to make payroll, she never approached King's lawyer with a repayment plan. She says she didn't receive notice of a court date or the judgment that she had defaulted. And so, she says, she was stunned to learn on August 31 that she had only 30 days to pay the loan plus interest --- or lose the business.

decided to handle the repayment, but didn't even contact the other side's legal counsel about it?!

well, next payday i'll get a catalogue and a couple packs of seed, seriously thought it sounds as if she totally screwed herself over as well as this oldschool seed company by her own negligence though
 

dansbuds

Retired from the workforce Bullshit
ICMag Donor
Veteran
hell yeah i'll buy the catalouge & some seeds for next years garden . we gotta help out where & when we can , especially an Icon company . just sounds like she needs a few bussiness courses :)
 

RetroGrow

Active member
Veteran
Well, for starters, she could use some of the money from catalog sales to reach out to the other attorney and try to work out a payment plan, as many debtors do.
She could possibly file for bankruptcy.
I think that she needs to hire an attorney with some of that money, or at least talk to some attorneys, most of whom give free initial consultations to at least explore her options, if any. If she can show a steady stream of income, I would think the other side might be willing to listen.If she goes into bankruptcy, her creditor might not get anything.
Just my 2 cents. I am not a lawyer, needless to say. Does her creditor want her business, or just her money?
One would think another seed company would be interested if her products are truly unique.
 

DiscoBiscuit

weed fiend
Veteran
If she pulls through, an attorney would be a great start. According to the article, she couldn't get capital. Conventional loans might offer restructuring opportunity where venture capitalists either gain or lose. It's a gamble.

But this was private party loans that spelled out the brass tacks and the loaner want's her money. How she gets her money is up to the court and to a degree the plaintiff. If the loaner doesn't want to mess with the business to recoup, the court could liquidate the company and pay off or toward the loan. Any balance would have to come from Melera whether she has to beg or borrow again. If Melera isn't incorporated, they could take her home.

I hate to see a bad ending and that's not the only reason I posted. Some gardeners might actually prefer mail-order to market. These guys have been around and are reputable (at least for the next 3 weeks.) And some here don't like genetic mod.

To be honest, the idea that a few puffers could help this lady and help themselves sounds kinda cool. But if she's a Doonesbury....
 

supermanlives

Active member
Veteran
good find . ordering catalog. i love heriloom seeds. hope she dont go out of buisness before i get some seeds. as i dont really need a pretty catalog
 

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