897tgigvib
Garden Master
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ah never mind
I hate it when i violate central tenants
In the eastern part of the U.S. most organic farms are only a few acres- 10-20 at most. So there are hundreds if not thousands of people who do make their living as organic farmers- and without being land tycoons.seedcorn said:can someone make a living on 40 acres of apple trees?
You are assuming that is no organic way to deal with scab.If organic can't use chemicals to stop scab, how much do scabby apples sell for vs. non-scabby apples?
Nothing in the world is chemical free because everything in the world is made up of chemical elements. Organic simply means something that isnt manmade. A spray made from sulfur is a chemical spray, but it is an organic spray as long as no manmade mixture of chemicals is included with it.IF organic can use chemicals is it really organic or chemical free?
By and large USDA standards are written for the benefit of the agriculture/food processing industry. Big companies like Monsanto and Conagra want to be able to legally label their products as organic so they can charge higher prices without having to abide by the stricter organic standards that are set by non-government organizations.marshallsmyth said:Let us say organic farmers can't use chemicals, but must use USDA approved materials for certification.
Thus showing that an organic method is not always an environmentally sound method. Pyrethrum destroys a farm's ecosystem by killing all bugs. In terms of environmental devastation it is no different than any non-organic pesticide that does the same thing. Furthermore, the flowers used to make pyrethrum must be harvested and processed by hand and I've seen reports that the women and children who do this work in Africa have gotten sick because of their exposure to pyrethrum.The Mama Chicken said:There are several organic treatments that can be used on crops. Pyrethrum is made from chrysanthemums, and it is a hardcore neurotoxin that kills all insects (good or bad.) Since it's made from natural substances it's organic.
Very true, a better choice would be Certified Naturally Grown. The program isn't run by the government, so there isn't the corruption that is inherent in the system. (And now I have Monty Python stuck in my head..."Oh! Come and see the violence inherent in the system! Help, help, I'm being repressed!")homewardbound said:By and large USDA standards are written for the benefit of the agriculture/food processing industry. Big companies like Monsanto and Conagra want to be able to legally label their products as organic so they can charge higher prices without having to abide by the stricter organic standards that are set by non-government organizations.marshallsmyth said:Let us say organic farmers can't use chemicals, but must use USDA approved materials for certification.
I dont go out of my way to buy things just because they are labeled organic or natural because you never know or can never really trust the standards being lived up to. I cannot vouch for what goes into the compost that I buy for my garden- I get what I can afford, and I do use some non-organic liquid fertilizer mainly because Floridas rain, heat and sandy soils mean organic matter doesnt last long in your soil; I use liquid fertilizer to take advantage of natural rainfall (8 inches down since January) that I dont always have available. But I dont use non-organic pesticide around food plants except when I have to deal with ants because I am allergic to ant venom and I know of no organic control for ants that actually works. Using my own standards I could not get any kind of certification. But then if I were to sell anything I wouldnt have an excuse for price gouging.Ridgerunner said:I'm personally not all that comforted by the "certified organic" label.
Some methods are more labor intensive than others. Growing vegetables in rows takes a lot more time and labor than using wide beds or Mel Bartholomews 4 foot by 4 foot beds. You get more weeds in rows than you do beds because the plants in a bed shade the ground they are growing in and form their own mulch. And once you have beds established you have less plowing and digging to do between crops.Another big reason organic can cost more is that it is labor intensive.
I have to do all of this for the produce that I give away and a non-organic farmer has to do the same so none of this would give an organic farmer a cost that a non-organic farmer would not also have.You have to harvest it, sort it, clean it, package it, warehouse it, and transport it.
Doesnt most produce have to be picked by hand? Can you pick apples, cucumbers, tomatoes, lettuce or peppers by machine? And dont machines need fuel and oil changes and new tires and spare parts and repairs that an organic farmer using hand labor would not have to pay for?Huge factory farms that can automate those processes can do it a lot cheaper than someone who has to do it by hand.
I dont live anywhere near farm country so practically nothing is produced locally. But in comparison to what gets sold by Walmart and the local grocery stores the organic produce sold by Whole Foods and the few organic groceries we have here never looks that bad.Some "organic" produce is not as pretty as the farm factory produced stuff.
Which goes back to my original premise: It doesnt cost any more to be organic than it does to be conventional, but organic food costs more because some consumers are willing to pay a premium price just because something is labeled organic.Many people won't buy it because it has a blemish, let alone pay more for it. You might say that "organic" is more of a niche market than a mass market.
I don't believe that Babydoll Southdown wool is similar to Cashmere Hair.homewardbound said:2 other crops from the same space as the orchard- meat and wool similar to cashmere.