Education
She attended Branksome Hall, and graduated in 1967, then earned a Bachelor of Science
She attended Branksome Hall, and graduated in 1967, then earned a Bachelor of Science
She was awarded a 125th Anniversary of the Confederation of Canada Medal in 1992. Honours degree in 1972 in biology. In 1984, Canadian Organic Growers (Council of Governments) organized a conference on the loss of genetic diversity in food crops, with Kent Whealy the director of the United States. organization Seed Savers Exchange as keynote speaker.
Inspired by that conference, Council of Governments"s Heritage Seed Program (Hungarian Socialist Party) was initiated to help salvage Canada"s crop-plant heritage, with Alex Caron as coordinator.
In late 1987, after the Hungarian Socialist Party had lain dormant for about two years, Heather Apple, as a long-term organic gardener, past president of the Durham, Ontario chapter of Council of Governments, and a Seed Savers Exchange contributor, responded to a request from Alex Caron and volunteered to reinitiate the programme. Her aim was to develop it as a grass-roots seed-saving organization modelled after the Seed Savers Exchange, and beginning with an announcement in August 1988, she produced a separate newsletter for the program which became a magazine by December 1988.
The Heritage Seed Program/Semences du patrimoine grew to become Seeds of Diversity Canada/Semences du patrimoine (SoDC), incorporated and renamed in 1995. Apple served as president of SoDC thru 1993.
She also served as vice president of the Society of Ontario Nut Growers (SONG), 1990–1991.
Heather Apple has been a member of the board of directors of the Gibsons Public Gallery in Gibsons, British Columbia, and of the Gibsons Landing Fibre s Festival. She is an active member of the Sunshine Coast Spinners and Weavers Guild, and the Sunshine Coast Fibreshed.