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Home-Grown Veg Ruined by Toxic Fertiliser
Gardeners have been warned not to eat home-grown vegetables contaminated by a powerful new herbicide that is destroying gardens and allotments across the UK.
The Royal Horticultural Society (RHS) has been inundated with calls from concerned gardeners who have seen potatoes, beans, peas, carrots and salad vegetables wither or become grossly deformed. The society admitted that it had no idea of the extent of the problem, but said it appeared 'significant'. The affected gardens and allotments have been contaminated by manure originating from farms where the hormone-based herbicide aminopyralid has been sprayed on fields.
Dow AgroSciences, which manufactures aminopyralid, has posted advice to allotment holders and gardeners on its website. Colin Bowers, Dow's UK grassland marketing manager, told The Observer that links to their products had been proved in some of the cases, but it was not clear whether aminopyralid was responsible for all of them and tests were continuing. 'It is undoubtedly a problem,' he said, 'and I have got full sympathy for everyone who is involved with this.'
He said the company was unable to advise gardeners that it was 'safe' to consume vegetables that had come into contact with the manure because of pesticide regulations. 'All we can say is that the trace levels of aminopyralid that are likely to be in these crops are of such low levels that they are unlikely to cause a problem to human health.'
The Dow website says: 'As a general rule, we suggest damaged produce (however this is caused) should not be consumed.' Those who have already used contaminated manure are advised not to replant on the affected soil for at least a year.
Aminopyralid, which is found in several Dow products, the most popular being Forefront, a herbicide, is not licensed to be used on food crops and carries a label warning farmers using it not to sell manure that might contain residue to gardeners. The Pesticides Safety Directorate, which has issued a regulatory update on the weedkiller, is taking samples from affected plants for testing.
Problems with the herbicide emerged late last year, when some commercial potato growers reported damaged crops. In response, Dow launched a campaign within the agriculture industry to ensure that farmers were aware of how the products should be used. Nevertheless, the herbicide has now entered the food chain. Those affected are demanding an investigation and a ban on the product. They say they have been given no definitive answer as to whether other produce on their gardens and allotments is safe to eat.
It appears that the contamination came from grass treated 12 months ago. Experts say the grass was probably made into silage, then fed to cattle during the winter months. The herbicide remained present in the silage, passed through the animal and into manure that was later sold. Horses fed on hay that had been treated could also be a channel.
Bryn Pugh, legal consultant at the National Society of Allotments and Leisure Gardeners, said he was preparing claims for some members to seek financial compensation from the manure suppliers. But it was extremely difficult to trace the exact origins of each contaminated batch. 'It seems to be everywhere. From what I know, it is endemic throughout England and Wales. We will be pressing the government to ban this product,' he said.
Aminopyralid is popular with farmers, who spray it on grassland because it controls weeds such as docks, thistles and nettles without affecting the grass around them. It binds itself to the woody tissue in the grass and only breaks down when exposed to bacteria in the soil.
Shirley Murray, 53, a retired management consultant with an allotment near Bushy Park in Hampton, south-west London, said several of her allotment neighbours had used the same manure bought from a stables and all were affected. 'I am absolutely incensed at what has happened and find it scandalous that a weedkiller sprayed more than one year ago, that has passed through an animal's gut, was kicked around on a stable floor, stored in a muck heap in a field, then on an allotment site and was finally dug into or mulched on to beds last winter is still killing "sensitive" crops and will continue to do so for the next year,' she said.
'It's very toxic, it shouldn't get into the food chain. You try to be as organic as you can and we have poisoned ourfood. I've been everywhere, emailed all the right people, but nobody will speak on the record to guarantee what is safe to eat. We all think it is a scandal. Not to mention what it has cost in time and money.'
Pesticide expert Professor Vyvyan Howard, a toxico-pathologist at Ulster University, said it was 'a very powerful herbicide' but in his opinion was 'unlikely to pose any human health risks'. However, advice about its use should be strengthened, he said. 'I think the thing that is going to drive this is the commercial damage that could be done to market gardeners,' he said.
Guy Barter, the RHS head of horticultural advisory services, said they were receiving more than 20 calls a week. 'Our advice is not to eat the vegetables because no one seems to have any idea whether it is safe to eat them and we can't give any assurances,' he said. 'It is happening all over the country. A lot of cases we are seeing is where people have got manure from stables and the stable have bought their hay from a merchant, and the merchant might have bought hay from many farmers, possibly from different parts of the country. So they have no idea where the hay came from. So finding someone to blame is quite difficult.' Weedkiller in the soil should dissipate by next year, but in stacks of contaminated manure it might take two or more years to decay, he added.
Dow is planning a major publicity campaign to reiterate warnings to farmers over usage, and to encourage allotment holders to check the provenance of manure that they put down in an effort to prevent the problem escalating. On compensation, it was less forthcoming. 'There is no easy answer to that,' said Bowers. 'The first port of call is always where the manure comes from. From that point on, I can't really comment.
'The chain is horrendously complicated. In the cases we have managed to trace back, we might find that the farmer who supplied the manure didn't spray anything himself, but he might have bought in a couple of bales of silage from one of his neighbours, and that farm might have sprayed.'
Robin and Christina Jones spread a large amount of manure over their flower garden and vegetable patch at their home in Banstead, Surrey. When the potatoes failed, Robin took a sample to the RHS, which identified aminopyralid. His neighbour, who bought from the same source, suffered the same problems. 'We have lost 80 per cent of our vegetable patch,' said Jones, 65, a retired sound engineer. Raspberries, French beans, onions, leeks, even a newly planted robina tree were all affected. 'We are distraught. But what worries me is that the courgettes look very healthy. Had we not had the problem with the potatoes, we might never have realised. Now we are advised not to eat them.
'This is a very serious issue, and people must be made aware of the advice not to eat vegetables grown in contaminated manure.'
Sue Ainsworth, 58, an education consultant, said around 20 allotments at her site in Hale, Cheshire, had been affected. 'We first noticed with the potatoes. As they came through, they were deformed, all curled over and rotten underneath. But the worry is that the courgettes also planted on the manure are fine - but are they safe to eat? This must have affected thousands of people. I am really worried about this product and really think it should be withdrawn.'
She said the farmer who supplied the manure said he had used nothing unusual. 'But he may have bought in the straw and genuinely knew nothing about the herbicide used.'
Susan Garrett, 57, an IT consultant, said 20 plots were affected at her allotment in Wakefield, West Yorkshire. 'And that is just the plants we can see are damaged. We are angry it has been allowed to happen - not with the chemical company, but because there doesn't seem to be any protection for us or anything to stop it happening again.'
What's the solution? Join the debate and find out more on our food blog How to deal with the problem
Do you have contaminated manure? Tell-tale symptoms of crop damage include distorted foliage, with cupping of leaves and fern-like growth. There are no remedies once damage has occurred. Susceptible crops include potatoes, tomatoes, beans, peas, carrots and lettuce.
How should you deal with the affected area? Experts say rotavation is the best practice, or forking over several times as soon as possible. This incorporates the plant tissue into the soil, where it will decompose and the chemicals will eventually be degraded by soil microbes. Repeat the rotavation in late summer/early autumn.
Should you replant this season? No. The plant residues need to be given time to break down. The advice is not to replant for a year.
Why has the chemical lasted so long? Aminopyralid, like other herbicides, works by binding strongly to plant tissues. Once the plant's tissues decay, the chemical breaks down in the soil. If manure is stacked it takes far longer.
guardian.co.uk © Guardian News and Media Limited 2008
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29 Comments so far
Show AllWow! I'm starting all my composters up for next spring now. Green Manure will be planted in August and September. I'm staying away from poop of any kind.
If Dow were a Middle Eastern owned company, there would be another war right now. However, Dow is well involved in the military industry, so mainstream will call this an innocent mistake by a caring company, if the story even breaks.
Sounds like a "latter-day" version of Jesus' parable: "...and when men sleep, his enemy came and overseeded with bad weed amongst the wheat, and then he left" (Matthew 13:25). (lol)
Shucks...there goes my partime job spraying gardens from the back lanes at night for...um...bugs.
(Local big box supermarkets hired me to do it...sort of a community service on their part)
This story certainly begs the question: exactly who ARE the terrorists? Pesticides are chemical weapons, are they not?
Mad MEN [and a few Mad Women] are running our world for the almighty dollar [or other currency] and the powers they believe it brings. Dow Chemical to the sleazy sex-slave trader of women and young girls, and everything in between.
In the meantime, FOOD, WATER, AIR compromised: the engineering of climate irregularities globally causing torrents of rain, drought, violent storms,and more -- courtesy of the lethal U.S. HAARP program in Alaska; WAR on demand with lethal DU [depleted uranium] dust spreading around the globe; newly designed hydrogen bombs and every weapon available, including chemical and biological, to decimate populations of nations anywhere; genetically engineered crops, cloned animals for meat sales to the public; chemical fertilizers that cause disease and kill plant life and people; plastic trash and pollutants destroying the life of oceans, lakes, rivers; cutting, burning, hacking, poisoning forests and fields; crippling, killing, extinquishing wild life and eco-systems, and on and on and on ...
Cement-minded political figures, political bodies world-wide, including the United Nations,and super-cement-minded "religious leaders" have benefit of a collabortive media, for the most part, to go along, to not report, to soft-pedal or not follow-up nightmare stories that need to be told.
Eight years ago I felt it in my very bones. I would have loved to have been wrong. But the slow, now accelerating, mass suicide of the human species is getting closer and closer.
Making lists of the crimes of the off-the-charts "bad guys," who happen to be running our government and corporations here at home,and commenting about the problems is important to a small degree.
But what is most important are the decisions each one of us makes individually and the actions we take personally to simplify our lifestyles, to connect, collaborate and share with like-minded individuals to create positive, life-enhancing ways of doing things that protect, heal, preserve life.
How we perceive, how we treat others, including creatures, what we do and don't do, how we live--all have to be transformed. And that ain't easy and sometimes it takes great personal courage to examine one's own part in this debacle.
There are many guides around. I recommend the current, simple, but profound: Eckhart Tolle's "A NEW EARTH, Awakening to Your Life's Purpose."
We are, indeed, running out of time.
peace ...
Cee Miracles: Excellent post!
TurnOffYourTV-We are HUGE composters in this house with 3 going.
We used finished manure in our garden this year, granted we aren't in the UK, but we had major trouble with our beans-they'd sprout but not emerge or if they emerged, they'd wither. So this is interesting...
Of course, we have a ton of tomatoes and htey've not had any trouble and tomatoes are usually very susceptible to anything out of the ordinary.
Dow flack sez: '... I have got full sympathy for everyone who is involved with this.'
***
Wonder if the remuneration will flow as generously as the sympathy?
So DOW is doing bad things to plants again. How long has it taken for Agrnt Orange to exit Vietnam? It's still there I think.
What's the long term affect of this poison on our children? Trust of corporations is becoming impossible.
Has everyone seen the DOW "Human Element" commercials? They must have cost millions- they are astoundingly beautiful- fabulous cinematography, beautiful music, soothing voices... BRAINWASHING the masses is what they are attempting. Put those beautiful images in people's minds and associate them with DOW so that no one would ever believe that they could do wrong. The commercials seem to mainly be on channels like science and nature ones- so who are they targeting do you suppose? I get enraged every time I see one.
Well, thank heavens GB has a Labour government that won't stand for such corporate misbehavior!
No matter how carefully applied and sprayed, long lived chemicals will spread into the ecosystem and our food chain. This herbicide is far too long lived and should be banned.
If it binds strongly to plant tissues, then it might also bind strongly to animal tissues. Getting animals buried for it to break down doesn't sound like a good way to get rid of from the food chain.
Oh, Industrial Agriculture, what bone-head thing will you do next?
A highly-toxic chemical substance, not found in Nature, turns out to have weider and more complex interaction with the World than the "smart" people who invented it anticipated?
But they had lots of degrees and stuff. Why would we doubt them?
They were motivated by profit and personal gain. How could we have known?
They probably wore plastic googles and held up beakers full of stuff to look closer at them. They had like a TON of computers and junk. They were wearing long white coats, WHITE COATS for crissakes!
Why WOULDN'T we trust them with their deadly chemical? Right?
Hopefully this doesn't get too serious in Britain and people see it as a bit of a wake-up call in regards to the dangerous stupidity in some of the underlying notions of Industrial Ag- otherwise it wouldn't be that funny anymore.
I mean look at the lesson that all those big-brains and clever-power-jockeys at DOW are slowly failing to learn:
Herbicides kill Plants.
Plants are what we, and the Animals we eat, eat.
Industrial Chemicals are not Natural.
Things that aren't Natural tend to interact with things that are in strange, unpredictable, and often destructive ways.
Therefore Industrial Chemical Herbicides might be a Bad Idea.
Keep at it guys, you'll get there, just please don't kill the rest of us before you do, okay? We like being alive, thanks.
-matti.
Nobody deserves sympathy for using any industrial herbicide on food crops. NOBODY! What on earth were these people thinking?
And another thread: why on earth would anyone trust Dow Chemical? I hope the lawsuits from this clean them out.
Catch...
...if our legislatures haven't already done it, I guess they'd better get cracking and put a cap on the amount that fertilizer giants can be sued for.
(Here in Canada we have piece of legislation doing that for our nuclear industry right now.)
Cee Miracles:
Oh, do not get your panties in a bunch. I read that somewhere some entrepreneurial dude at the pentagon, probably a friend of Karl Roves said that chickens could be used to clean up DU. They just eat it and it comes out uncontaminated.
Hey, with award winning innovations like this… we will never again have to say that…shit happens.
Oh...it's been a long day.
Shades of Bhopal, Batman, Dow doesn't give a damn.
Or is it a matter of race/ethnicity?
Catch sez: "Nobody deserves sympathy for using any industrial herbicide on food crops. NOBODY! What on earth were these people thinking?"
***
The victims here are two or three degrees of separation away from the use of the herbicide. By opting for manure over chemical fertilizer, they presumably had the idea they were growing their crops somewhat naturally.
Some of the manure providers may have been spraying the stuff on their own silage, but I'd bet plenty of them were purchasing the feed from a third party, which is where the contamination took place.
The gardeners get blindsided but, hey, the free market works!
hedology (5:42pm)
Re: binding to tissues
Aminopyralid, the article states, binds to "woody" tissues in plants, which I'm taking to mean cellulose. That would also sync with the requirement that it be broken down by bacteria, which are suited (whereas animals aren't) for breaking down cellulose as well as the statement that it passes through animals [supposedly] benignly.
Having skimmed the EPA report on aminopyralid, I would say as a botanist that it appears (so far) to be a relatively safe product. I personally would never use it or knowingly consume anything contaminated with it though: broadleaf herbicides just aren't worth the hassle or risk unless you are a large monocot (i.e. grasses) agribusiness.
Of course, that highlights the real threat of this product: the threat to gardeners and growers of real food for real humans (instead of grains for animals and the sugar industry), and for that reason alone, I feel it should be banned. Governments should not be in the business of allowing corporations to poison the environment for a quick buck.
thewonderingyou-
WRONG: the stomachs of a cow are designed to digest cellulose.
Farmers use such pesticides because they are quick, easy and cheap solutions.
The more traditional methods of weed control for hay are Liming and manure spreading, but its a lot of work, and manure can be sold.
Just another case of a failed attempt to reduce costs, increase production, but total failure for the environment.
I bought hay from an AMISH farmer. When I complimented him on it, he said, "Well, I spray".
I didn't think the Amish would, but there you go.
That explains why the Jerusalem artichokes I planted in old grass look much better than the ones I planted where I used manure.
Get pure alfalfa pellets from a feed store, it's the very best green manure you can have for your compost heap, mix in a little dry dog food with your other compost items. Plant innoculated soy beans and turn them into the soil when they are six inches or more high.
So.... Just how did salmonella get into the tomato crops...???
Are we now bio-engineering our own demise...???
It's OK though, the fat cats have to feed from the same trough and it is my hope that they choke on every bite of poisoned food that they have engineered.
Man is the blight of this planet.... Everytime I buy a product either for eating or for recreation, I contribute to my own demise. For that reason, I am a very happy consumer.... That is afterall what we have become, no longer consider yourself a citizen, we are now consumers in the continuium.
Laughing to my Grave.... KCT
We need to change the rules about how corporations function. Dow should be forced to pay reparations, have their charter revoked, and be shut down for yet ANOTHER atrocity. This company has soldiered on destroying lives and the planet for DECADES without so much as a slap on the wrist. Here's a new motto for DOW: "Killing pests, bees, plants, animals, people, and the planet softly: because we care!"
The alfalfa pellets Kem Patrick suggests are a good idea. I would be careful about the dry dog food however, if it contains animal byproducts scraped up from slaughterhouse floors then you run the risk of introducing the prion called scrapie into your soils and that is what causes Mad Cow Disease. I'm not really up on scrapie anymore but learned a lot about it back when we had cows and one of its characteristics is persistence in soil, there was a study done where sheep from a 'clean' flock grazed on scrapie-contaminated soil and ended up with the disease . . . (it has been endemic in sheep for centuries and jumped to cows when their feeds were 'supplemented' with sheep by-products for absolutely no reason except to get rid of the sheep by-products).
Rotational green manuring with soy beans or other quick growing crops is always good.
This aminopyralid sounds like some toxic shit. The best way to control weeds as far as I'm concerned is to have a few browsers around -- goats are the classic example -- who LIKE to eat theses types of weeds . . .
tech2 (6:46 am)
For the record (in case anyone else looks back into the CD archives at this article,) I am not wrong. A cow simply does not posses the enzyme necessary for cellulose digestion. Those enzymes are provided by bacteria living in the cow itself. The same goes for any ruminant. Though you could say that any such animal with multiple stomachs is anatomically "designed" to digest cellulose, the actual biological "breaking down" (and more importantly the key step in degradation of aminopyralid) of cellulose is done by bacteria.
On a lighter note, maybe the geniuses at ABS Global can genetically engineer a cow with eight or sixteen stomachs...I'm envisioning a Dachshund-like, stretch-limo physique or something equally grotesque. Because obviously if aminopyralid is persistent in the manure of the current species, their stomachs truly aren't designed to digest cellulose.