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Share: MARCH
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March 26, 2004
ISSUE |
WHO SHOULD OWN ORGANIC?
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
The rapid expansion of organic agriculture presents
us with tough choices. CSA pioneer Elizabeth Henderson
argues in her keynote address at the Upper Midwest Organic
conference that we must make a decision about our identity:
are we an industry? Or are we a movement?
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/ehenderson.php
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ISSUE |
THE ORGANIC OCTOPUS
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
At least four workshop presenters at the Upper Midwest
Organic Farming Conference opened their sessions by
putting Phil Howard's "Organic Industry Structure"
chart up on the screen. Look, they said. This is what
we're up against. It's a chart that's worth a thousand
words. It graphs organic brand acquisitions and introductions
by 13 of the world's largest food and beverage companies.
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/philhoward.php
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CERTIFICATION |
STATE AND REGIONAL
CERTIFIERS WEIGH IN ON NOP
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
When National Organic Program (NOP) Manager Richard
Mathews was a no-show at the recent Eco-Farm Conference
workshop dedicated to a discussion of federal Organic
Rule implementation from certifiers’ perspectives,
the absence set a theme of sorts that ran throughout
the hour-and-a-half question-and-answer session. (According
to conference organizers, Mathews was unable to attend
due to USDA budget cuts and related travel restrictions.)
What came out of the discussion was that, while some
parts of implementation of the federal Organic Rule
are working, agency leaders say there’s plenty
that still needs fixing.
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/ecofarmnop.php |
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ETHICAL WILDCRAFTING--OXYMORON?
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Wildcrafting provides a “simple” life full
of complex ethical and practical considerations. Bruce
Buren, an ethical harvester of wild plants, ponders
the best way to preserve and protect the wild plants
he values and depends on.
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/wildethics.php |
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COMPOST |
TRASH
OR CASH?
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Pennsylvania pioneers a permit that diverts tons of
trash weekly from the landfill and turns it into “black
gold” for farmers…and that’s only
the pilot project! They're recycling food waste into
compost. Ken Gehringer’s Four Springs Farm, a
cash grain operation in Lehigh County, Pennsylvania,
receives up to 10 tons of food waste weekly from the
produce, bakery and other departments of Wegmans, a
local high-end grocery store, for composting.
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/papermit.php
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PROCESSING |
MINNESOTA FARMERS
MAKE THEIR OWN MARKET
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
For farmers transitioning from conventional
to organic production, the switch is perhaps made easier
by the lure of eager markets and premium prices. But
while such markets and prices do exist, physically reaching
them can often be a challenge. Four years ago, a group
of farmers in northern Minnesota were having trouble
accessing markets for their organic grain crops. So
they bought a processing and storage facility in their
own backyard.
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/marketmake.php |
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CONFERENCE |
A STITCH IN TIME
SAVES CATTLEMAN FROM MAD COW
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
IFO president Charlie Eselgroth urged farmers in Ohio
to prepare to take new steps toward sustainability to
weather the inevitable challenges to come. As he shared
during opening comments at the recent Innovative Farmers
of Ohio (IFO) annual conference, Eselgroth's preparation
not his luck was key to finding sleep at night when
other cattle farmers were caught up in the mad cow fallout.
His customers knew the origin of their products, keeping
Eselgroth’s markets more stable.
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/ifoprepare.php |
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PROFILE |
THREE GENERATIONS
OF BIG-LITTLE CEREAL FARMERS CAN GROW ORGANIC
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Three generations of cereal farmers in Saskatchewan
grow organically on 3000 acres. Small by Saskatchewan
conventional farming standards, the Bodera farm is large
for an organic farm in the region. Father, son and grandson
have been growing flax, wheat, barley, oats and mustard
organically since 1989. They're the heart and soul of
the North American breadbasket, as well as its future
– farming sustainably, on the free market, and
liking it.
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/saskatchcereal.php
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MARKETING |
NOW IS THE TIME FOR
SHAMELESS SELF-PROMOTION
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
He can't plant, cultivate or harvest--the
fields are a swamp--but Mariquita's Andy Griffin can
sell shares and hustle publicity. “Why,”
you ask “would you aggressively make promises
about future harvests just exactly when you feel uneasy
about your ability to produce them?” Easy. It’s
like this. He does have some product overwintering in
the ground and the vision of fresh veggies are an easy
sell to customers tired of the grocery store's deep-winter
wares. Plus, everyone's trying to figure out how to
keep that New Year's resolution to "get healthy."
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/selfpromo.php
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PROFILE |
ORGANIC FOR 37
YEARS
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Sustainable farming’s pioneer couple Dick and
Sharon Thompson shared the basics from their Iowa farm
at the recent Innovative Farmers of Ohio Conference.
They want the insights from their 37 years of hard work,
head scratching and research to encourage other farmers
to adopt and adapt for greater sustainability.
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/ifothompson.php
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PROFILE |
FROM
COURTROOM TO FOREST
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
A one-time lawyer trades in his legal practice to nurture
and harvest wild medicinals. Ginseng, goldenseal, black
cohosh, skull cap, snake root … Eastern Ohio’s
Bruce Buren makes a decent living off of what most farmers
dismiss as weeds and wasted land.
www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs2/wildcraft.php
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>> Back to top >>
March 5, 2004
NEWS |
DAIRY FARMERS WIN BACK THEIR FREEDOM OF SPEECH
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
In a unanimous decision, the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the 3rd Circuit has ruled the dairy check-off unconstitutional
under the First Amendment. The challenge was brought
to the court by Pennsylvania farmers Joe and Brenda
Cochran, who argued the check-off violated their freedom
of speech by forcing them to pay for advertising with
which they did not agree. But the fight isn't over yet.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/cochran.php |
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ISSUE |
SEED: THE ACHILLES'
HEEL OF ORGANIC
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
The growing evidence in this country that much of our
seed stock is GMO-contaminated raises tough questions
about the future of organic—what it is, what it
should be, and how we can reduce our vulnerability and
preserve our integrity and vision as organic farmers.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/achillesheel.php |
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TOOLS |
RETOOLING FOR INNOVATIVE
COVER CROP SEEDING
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Innovative farming techniques often call for innovative
tools. At Dutra Farms, just like many farms across the
country, that means that the field crew pulls double
duty as equipment engineers. A wonderful example of
this ingenuity is the seed driller retrofitted by farm
manager Virgilio “Hilo” Yepez and his team.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/hilo.php |
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FLOWERS |
THINKING
WARM WHEN IT'S COLD MEANS BETTER VARIETY
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
It may be cold in the north, but flower farmers should
have their minds soaking in the summer sun. Time to
get a move on, dust off the seeding benches, clean up
the greenhouse or basement, get some more of those seeds
started and plan for starting other seeds into spring.
Having a good variety of flowers for summer harvest
depends upon it. There’s plenty of time to think
about sunflowers and zinnias, the summer garden workhorses,
but they only go so far. Some of the best summer sellers
need to be started NOW!
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/summerharvest.php |
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FOOD SAFETY,
BUSINESS PLANNING AND LOCAL FOOD ADVOCACY TAKE CENTER
STAGE
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Food safety, business planning, and local food advocacy
take center stage at the Practical Farmers of Iowa conference
in Des Moines, IA. PFI speakers call for scrupulous
post-harvest handling to keep food safe, careful planning
to guide farm entrepreneurship and persistent advocacy
to re-localize community food purchases.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/pficonf.php |
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PROFILE |
MORE THAN JUST MOVING
VEGGIES AT A FURIOUS PACE
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Veritable Vegetable—80 percent women,
$22 million in annual sales—does more than move
veggies at a furious pace. Somewhere between a for-profit
business and an advocacy group, it gives fair prices
and an increasingly rare wholesale outlet to smaller-scale
organic growers. And it's working. They are one of the
country’s original organic produce distributors
and still going strong.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/veritveg.php |
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PROFILE |
COFFEE CO-OP
BEATS SLUMPING MARKET
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Biodiverse plantings provide secondary
crops for small, mountain-side farmers in Finca la Puebla,
reducing dependence on income from fluctuating coffee
prices.The promising beginning of this Costa Rican coffee
cooperative offers a glimmer of hope for small farmers
everywhere who can join forces and link up with collaborators
interested in their sustainable future.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/fincalapuerta.php |
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CONFERENCE |
LOOKING
TO PRACTICAL TOOLS AND SOLUTIONS FOR SUSTAINING FAMILY
FARMS IN THE SOUTH
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
The workshops at the 13th Annual Conference of the Southern
Sustainable Agriculture Working Group in Gaineville,
Florida ran the gamut from hands-on farming techniques
to soil biology and community food systems. Practical
tools were the focus and an uplifting environment was
a result.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/sawgconf.php |
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PROFILE |
TAKING A MAGIC BUS
RIDE TO SUSTAINABLE FARMS OF MANY SCALES
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
From a modest hillside of kiwifruit, to hundreds of
acres of organic and IPM raspberries, a sprawling ranch
where holistically managed grass-fed beef cattle are
raised, to a 20-acre valley of intensively cultivated
vegetables, each farm—and farmer—has a unique
story.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/magicbus.php |
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ON FARM |
HUNGRY FOR SPRING
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Most of the repairs are done, the re-certification paperwork
is almost finished and the vetch and rye covers are
pushing through the stubble. If only the mud would go
away. Jeff Moyer, farm manager at The Rodale Institute,
shares the seasonal woes and wonders on the farm.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/jeffspring.php |
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GARLIC |
GUERILLA GARLIC
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
Battling the influx of cheap Chinese garlic—even
in to Gilroy, the “Garlic Capital of the World”—Mariquita
Farm is “thinking outside the box” and using
“appropriate technology.” They're growing
green spring garlic and banking their garlic dollars
long before the garlic festival in July.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/guerillagarlic.php |
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| AGRITOURISM |
AGRITOURISM
HITS HAWAII
From The New Farm®,
www.newfarm.org
From 2-acre coffee growers to 15,000-acre sugar plantations
and 225,000 acre ranches, Hawaii's farmers get on board
with the state's tourism industry and boost their farms'
viability.
http://www.newfarm.org/redirect/cs1/agritourhawaii.php |
>> Back to top >> |
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