Wednesday, August 26, 2009

To Be or Not To Be, Organic


Last Saturday I was pleased to accompany Elise to an event sponsored by CAGJ (Community Alliance for Global Justice) As described by there website

“Our visit to Carnation, WA will begin at Local Roots for a farm tour, and then continue down the road for a work party at Jubilee Farm! Both farm stops will offer opportunities to talk with the farmer and ask questions!”

Obviously this was a great opportunity for us. First stop Local Roots Farm this is a small farm (about 5 acres) and a big inspiration. About 3 years ago Jason was recently married living in a small apartment in capitol hill and having recently passed the BAR exam was a high paid and very unhappy lawyer. His wife on the other hand was interning on a farm and would come home singing. She was only interning for a few months before the land owner (whose name I have regrettable forgotten) noticed her enthusiasm as well as his, shall we say, ripening age and offered the sweet hearts a proposition. Jason quit his job and they split the land three ways all of them now having equal ownership and equal responsibilities. I was impressed by the amount and variety of food that came off of this small farm.

I asked Farmer Jason where he sells his food and to my delight he said to many local restaurants, the Madison Market , CSA partners and a variety of farmers markets. I then asked if his produce would be at the Ballard Sunday Farmers market, as I knew I would, and he said no. “But why not” I replied, this unfortunately opened a can of worms I was not prepared for. I believe the reason he gave was something to the extent that the Ballard farmers market and, the vendors there in, are allowed to participate by the vote of one person. Obviously disgruntled he began opening my eyes to the fairness of this as well as the fact that many of the vendors are retail and not even local retail at that. I have been stewing on this for a while and I understand that from a marketing standpoint it makes sense to appeal to all the yuppie condo dwellers that have been destroying the Ballards vibe for some time. I also know that I am an avid supporter of a non food booth at the market, when the rainy season sets in I usually buy a candle a week from ascents candle. So I am torn but I do lean toward the side of farmer Jason who says farmers markets should be for farmers.

A bit later in the tour we began talking about organic certification, and it turns out that Local Roots farms is not certified as organic, it also turns out that the regulations on organic certification are buried in bureaucracy and loop holes that I am only begging to understand. Thankfully Russ Parsons of the LA times does a pretty good job of describing some of the issues here: http://www.latimes.com/features/food/la-fo-calcook1-2009jul01,0,2885942.story So fine organic is all jaded by the media and the money so what do I look for in food now? Well one option is to be CNG (Certified Naturally Grown) as their website states

“Farmers created Certified Naturally Grown to provide an alternative way to assure their customers that they observed strict growing practices. CNG strives to strengthen the organic movement by removing financial barriers to certification that tend to exclude smaller direct-market farms, while preserving high standards for natural production methods.”

Another thing to keep your eye out for is to be Salmon Safe and as their website explains,

“Almost a decade after we first started certifying fish friendly farms in Oregon's Willamette Valley, Salmon-Safe has become one of the nation's leading regional eco labels with more than 50,000 acres of farm and urban lands certified. The Salmon-Safe retail campaign has been featured in 200 supermarkets and natural food stores.
Salmon-Safe is an independent 501(c)3 nonprofit devoted to restoring agricultural and urban watersheds so that salmon can spawn and thrive. We're based in Portland, Oregon.

FYI Local Roots is certified as both Salmon Safe and CNG but to be clear, not organic, are you still with me?

Great, now its time to move on to our next farm this was less chat more dig. We harvested potatoes, I loved it! Again I was impressed by the amount of food we harvested just one strip of land and it gave us about 5 or 6 huge bags, three cheers for mother nature.

The big lesson I took away from Jubilee was Farmer Eric’s (a philosophy teacher turned farmer) method of sharing. At Local roots they had 5 interns that basically were in it for the experience and making about 200 dollars a month working 6 days a week in 12 hour shifts, this is not very sustainable. However Jubilee had a lovely solution members would donate 4 hours weekly to the farm and be given weekly large shares of food in return. Farmer Eric said he has about 80 people on work share, that’s a lot of weeding! Of course this can only work on a larger farm that have that much extra food to give to workers but either way it left me optimistic, as I hope it did you.

4 comments:

  1. Great read! I feel like I just went to the farm and got my hands dirty! I do wonder about farmer Jason's student loans after all that law school. That's a lot of potatoes! Maybe he'll have some ammo to change the political climate of the farmer's markets.
    I've run across the salmon safe certification in some literature. Perhaps Jo is familiar as well since they are involved in restoring watersheds for salmon spawning.

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  2. Very nice--now you're getting some diverse voices about the challenges of local food disribution and consumption! AND I've seen that you've registered for the Food Class, so you're well on your way to becoming a fully informed eater.

    Keep up the good work!

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  3. Nicely captured Erin, thanks! I am thrilled with all that I learned here and will continue to reflect on it. Both of these farmers are a true inspiration. My questions for our interview this week, one of the managers of the Seattle farmers markets, will change because of this experience.

    Elise

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  4. I hadn't heard of Certified Naturally Grown before - good to know. I have heard of Salmon Safe, in part because I interviewed a local organization doing Salmon Safe farming for Critical Inquiry.

    So, this quarter in my Permaculture and Environmental Science classes I'm learning about more sustainable methods of farming - intercropping, agroforestry, edible food forests, for example. I'm curious if these mean anything to you, and if you are seeing examples of this?

    http://attra.ncat.org/attra-pub/intercrop.html
    http://www.agroforestry.net/
    http://www.edibleforestgardens.com/

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