Deli Sprouts This is a blended variety of alfalfa sprouts with other sprouts mixed in. The alfalfa component should have crisp white roots and green tops, but the other sprouts can look quite different. Deli sprouts include radish, which may be...
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We’ve been working with Bullfrog Power for around 10 years or so, and they recently asked us if we wanted to be featured in their Buzz magazine. We’re often reluctant to share information that feels self congratulatory however...
View moreEatmore owner wins Agriculture Award
Read Full Article at Comox Valley Record, Terry Farrell, Feb. 5, 2021 Carmen Wakeling, CEO and co-owner of Eatmore Sprouts & Greens in Courtenay, has been given the BC Agriculture Council’s Award for Excellence In Agriculture Leadership...
View moreSafe, Quality, 100% Recyclable Plastic Packaging
Here at Eatmore Sprouts & Greens Ltd., one of the most common questions we get, is about our packaging. Why plastic? We aim to store our products in packaging that is designed to uphold the safety and quality of the sprouts, that complies...
View moreWe Pick BC First: Eatmore Sprouts Recognized for Local Excellence
We’re proud to share that Eatmore Sprouts has been featured as a “We Pick BC First” spotlight business, a campaign that celebrates British Columbia companies that lead the way in sustainability, local sourcing, and community impact. Rooted in BC...
View moreSprouts & Greens Available Year-Round
As we start into Winter, and the days get colder, fewer greens will become available at your local markets, and less local greens are available in grocery stores. This is the seasonality of your average vegetables. So now is a perfect time to...
View moreNew Recipes!
We’ve released ten new recipes on our website and we are so excited for them! Over the past few months we’ve been working with Hilary Malone of Sea Salt Food Co., to develop recipes specifically for our Eatmore products. It’s one thing to tell...
View moreMay Contain Wheat
We have had several questions about the “MAY CONTAIN WHEAT” phrase on our Deli Blend and Mixed Bean Sprouts, so we wanted to shed a little light on what that might mean to you. For those with food allergies, sensitivities or...
View moreA COVID Update
Thank you to all our valued customers for continuing to support Eatmore Sprouts & Greens Ltd. We continue to produce and deliver fresh, organic sprouts and microgreens for our communities. We are maintaining service and continue to ensure the...
View more14th Annual Organic Week
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View moreJust Add Sprouts Winners
We have come to the end of the 4-week “JUST ADD SPROUTS CHALLENGE, sponsored by the International Sprout Growers Association. For the month of May, participants from all over North America committed to adding a handful of sprouts to one meal a...
View moreEat More Sprouts Heads to Space: International Space Station Experiment This Summer
Read Original Article at Comox Valley Record | Terry Farrell, Mar. 5, 2019 6:00 a.m.
Picture: The five Ballenas School students behind the experiment: Investigating the Growth Patterns of Alfalfa (Medicago sativa) Sprouts in Microgravity: a Potential Nourishment for Future Manned Spaceflight.
Many companies claim their products are “out of this world” but few can say so literally.
Eat More Sprouts will soon be one of the few.
The Courtenay business is about to have an other-worldly experience.
This summer, when the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program (SSEP) Mission 13 to the International Space Station (ISS) launches, an experiment designed by five École Ballenas (Parksville) students will be aboard.
The experiment is titled Investigating the Growth Patterns of Alfalfa (Medicago sativa) Sprouts in Microgravity: a Potential Nourishment for Future Manned Spaceflight. The sprouts heading to space are from Eat More Sprouts in Courtenay.
Carmen Wakeling, co-owner of Eat More Sprouts, is… ahem… over the moon about the opportunity.
“I am really excited,” she said. “I have been told by scientists that sprouts are like the fruit fly of the vegetable world from a research perspective. They grow fast and experiments can be repeated several times a week where other crops might be repeated several times a year.”
The SSEP is an initiative of the National Center for Earth and Space Science Education (NCESSE), located in Maryland, USA, and the Arthur C. Clarke Institute for Space Education, which works internationally.
The American-based Student Space Flight Program (SSFP) invited School District 69 (Qualicum) to participate in the initiative. A call-out for experiments from students in Grade 5 through 12 in SD 69 was made in September of 2018.
Wakeling said she has been in on the project from the beginning.
“I first found out about this project in early September when the awesome teacher Mr. Carl Savage got in touch with me,” said Wakeling. “I then had a follow-up meeting with one of the students later in the month where I showed him our facility and talked to him about what it takes to grow a good sprout.”
The school district whittled down all the entries to three finalists, and sent them to the NCESSE.
From the submissions, the SSEP review board chose Investigating the Growth Patterns of Alfalfa (Medicago Sativa) Sprouts in Microgravity: a Potential Nourishment for Future Manned Spaceflight to be conducted on the International Space Station.
“We’re very fortunate to be part of the Student Spaceflight Experiments Program (SSEP),” said SD 69 assistant superintendent, Gillian Wilson. “The experience is preparing today’s learners for tomorrow’s world. It has been an unprecedented applied learning opportunity that emphasizes science, technology, engineering and math. Thanks to over $18,000 of funding, made possible by the Karen and Fred Green Fund (held at Vancouver Foundation) and Magellan Aerospace, over 400 students across the school district learned about the microgravity environment of space and created science experiment proposals.”
Wakeling is looking forward to hearing the results of the experiment.
“This project will give all of us more insight into how a plant will manage the stresses of the universe,” she said. “It may also give insights into what foods could realistically be grown with little daylight and water in a very controlled but potentially harsh environment.”
Does she have any predictions as to how her alfalfa will grow, in outer space?
“I think they may get a little curly,” she said. “Gravity causes the plants to orient upward but if there is less consistency in that area things could get a little wavy.
“I can only imagine things might not be as straight-forward in space as they are on earth.”















