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Slowdown in Once-Booming Organics Troubles Farmers
Westby, Wisc. - The organic dairy industry was thriving when Allen and Jean Moody bought a 200-acre Wisconsin dairy farm in 2006 and joined the ranks of farmers churning out milk raised without growth hormones, pesticides or other chemicals.
In this photo taken Tuesday, June 9, 2009, organic farmer Allen Moody is seen on his farm in Westby, Wis. A growing number of farmers who went all-natural in the years when organic food sales were growing at a double-digit pace are giving up their organic certifications. (AP Photo/Morry Gash) Three years later, the good days are gone and the Moodys aren't alone in wanting out.
A growing number of farmers who went all-natural in the years when organic food sales were growing at a double-digit pace are giving up their organic certifications. Organic farming is costly and labor-intensive, and many consumers are no longer willing to pay the price in a recession.
Sales in the U.S. of organic foods sold mostly at supermarkets are expected to drop 1.1 percent to $5.07 billion this year, according to the Chicago-based research firm Mintel. While the drop is small, it is the first in an industry that has seen annual growth of 12 percent to 23 percent since 2003.
The organic dairy industry has been the hardest hit, with farmers squeezed by soaring feed costs and plummeting milk prices.
The soured market has been particularly bad news for Moody, 53, and his 51-year-old wife, who put their farm in La Farge, Wis., up for sale last summer after deciding that running a dairy was too much work at their age. The credit crunch has left a string of would-be buyers unable to seal the deal even as the Moodys' milk buyer has cut his rate roughly 10 percent.
"We're kind of in limbo land right now. It's just really tough - I told my wife we may be here another two or three more years before things turn around and the money supply loosens up," Moody said.
The recession and credit crisis also have made times uncertain for George Mears, who raises organic corn, buckwheat, wheat and soybeans on 140 acres near Delphi, Ind. Much of it becomes feed for livestock that produce organic eggs, milk and beef.
Some buyers are no longer willing to purchase grain on contract because of uncertainty about the economy. And one company that buys Mears' grain has been slow to pay - Mears suspects because it can't get credit to buy grain up front.
"We're usually smaller farmers and you send a semi load or two of grain and that's like a quarter of your income for the year," he said. "You just don't drop a fourth of your income on the farm without some hardship."
A growing number of farmers are losing their certifications in the nation's two top organic states, California and Wisconsin.
In a typical year, the California Certified Organic Farmers, one of the nation's largest certifying groups, sees about 20 farms among its roughly 2,000 certified farms and processors lose their certification because of nonpayment of fees.
But two weeks ago, letters went out to 100 farms warning that their organic status would be revoked because of nonpayment, said Peggy Miars, the group's executive director. She blames weak sales and the state's lingering drought.
Bonnie Wideman, director of the Midwest Organic Services Association, expects about 80 of the group's roughly 1,200 certified organic farms in Wisconsin and several Midwestern states to surrender their certifications this year, up from about 60 in years past.
Still, the California and Wisconsin groups said interest in organics remains strong because the industry is not as bad off as others.
"In this depressed economy, when you're looking at bankruptcies and layoffs - we're just not seeing that in organics. Even though it's slowed down, there continues to be strong demand," Miars said.
Wideman's group issued 200 new organic certifications this year, mostly to vegetable, corn and soybean farmers. Some believe organics still have a greater potential for profit than conventional farming, she said. Others are simply committed to chemical-free farming.
That's the case for Jeff Evard, who once maintained golf courses heavily reliant on chemicals to stay green. He now raises tomatoes, onions, eggplant, broccoli and other crops on a 10-acre organic farm in south-central Indiana.
Half of his produce goes to about 65 families who pay up front for a season's worth of fresh vegetables and fruit. The rest heads to farmers' markets in Bloomington, Ind., about 30 miles away or is sold to organic wholesale stores.
Mindful of the recession, the farm's business manager recently lowered the price of the farm's top spring seller - cherry tomatoes - from $4 to $3.50 a pint to stave off a drop in demand. That seems to have done the trick.
"I've sold out of tomatoes every week for the past three or four weeks," the 36-year-old Evard said recently.
Consumers concerned about food quality have kept demand for organic vegetables and meat strong even as they've sacrificed organic snacks and other less nutritional items, said Marcia Mogelonsky, a senior research analyst for Mintel.
That should give the Moodys reason for hope. Committed to natural farming, they plan to buy a small organic beef farm whenever their dairy finally sells.

57 Comments so far
Show AllOrganic cost's more and it's as simple as that. The Latte day's are over.
It's not that simple at all. If one takes into account the huge costs to soil, the environment, and the huge waste of energy of traditional agro, organics falls into line with it.
Having said that, organic farming has much in common with big agro. They still use huge machines that use oil, and they still transport food across country. This cannot last.
What everything is pointing to is regional, small-scale farming, including back-yard growing. We will be forced to get our food from a smaller and smaller range, and this is good. For a very well done view of this, I highly recommend watching the documentary, A Farm For The Future: http://tinyurl.com/mspczt
Well Ted, I meant that organic farming on a big business level makes the product too expensive.
Now local, not even regional growers, is a whole different ball game. Especially back yard growing. Aside from the soils benefits and the savings in energy, if you ever taste a tomato grown in the back yard or from a local farmer after tasting the cardboard tomato's for sale in the grocery......you'd never eat another hot house tomato.
I'd say that overall, we actually agree.
Thanks for the link.
Excellent! Yes...not only do backyard produce taste way better, they reconnect the grower, physically and spiritually, with the earthy planet from which the grower's very body springs...a matter not to be taken lightly...let's get those gardens growing!
Not to demean any philosophical waxing, but the reasons for growing your own food may very well serve another purpose: to prevent you and your family from starving.
Things are changing rapidly. Food prices will keep rising. Water will keep getting scarce and expensive. Seeds are becoming scarce, especially given that big ag wants to do away with seed-saving by introducing hybrid terminator seeds. Peak oil is inevitable. Life as we know it is coming to an end (not LIFE, writ large, but as we have come to know it). It will become too expensive to ship food 'cross country, if it's even feasible to grow food the way we have been.
Not to take anything away from the philosophical aspects of growing and nurturing one's own food. Indeed, it was Bill Mollison, one of the founders of permaculture, who stated: "I can easily teach people to be gardeners, and from them, once they know how to garden, you'll get a philosopher. But I could never teach people to be philosophers - and if I did, you could never make a gardener out of them."
So, let's raise our trowels and hoes in defiance of the system that locks our food in stores and forces us into slave labor for it. Let's do the most radical thing we can. Let's grow our own food! Let's join the homegrown revolution!
Good one Ted. Right on. And yes, I am very inspired by the family in Pasadena. We are a lot like them, only in Montana, surrounded by state forest rather than suburbia. We depend on our root cellar, freezing and canning a lot more than we would if we lived in a more optimal climate.
And thanks for the link to the beautiful farm in Devon. Very beautiful and inspiring! It gives me a lot of hope to be involved in an agrarian lifestyle. I truly believe it's the only way to a sustainable and sane future.
edit: The above comment was made before I watched the rest of the video. Now that I've seen it I'm reeling. It's very well done, but the info is shocking and disturbing. Very graphic in the way she puts the pieces together. The sandwich illustration is quite revealing. A huge wake up call for us all.
We all, and I mean ALL of us hugely depend on fossil fuels. None of us are exempt. Even my little family and I who ride bikes and grow a huge organic garden using only hand tools. I've never used a rototiller or a tractor in my garden. And our lawn is mowed by our horses. But when I look around, the petroleum industry still permeates our lives. Even those of us that are trying to be pure. I need go no further than this keyboard I'm typing on to see petroleum.
So, let's start making this stuff from hemp!
Now, onto A Farm For The Future Part 2...
edit: Ah, the hope returns. Yes, as I said in the beginning, very inspiring. Permaculture and food forest is our only hope for a sustainable future. I feel fortunate to already be involved and well on the way. And seed saving and planting those seeds year after year. The food forest concept, most of the work is in the initial stages. After that it really becomes self perpetuating. Brilliant. I certainly will never again apologize for my gardens looking a bit untidy.
Big ag is on it's way down. The homegrown revolution is on it's way up! And, "the sooner we begin that transition to a low energy future, the easier that task will be." -Rebecca Hosking
Thanks again Ted! I'll be sure and share this wonderful and informative video series.
Our local hothouse tomatoes taste just great, thank you. Its the Florida field tomatoes picked by slave labour and trucked several thousand miles across the continent that are tasteless.
I wouldn't care to be rude, but I'll have to say I'll put a Jacksonville tomato, grown locally up against any hot house tomato in the world.
But we really agree about the slave labor in Florida.
Farming uses up to 10 calories of energy to produce 1 calorie of food energy. When oil prices take off again, food costs will right there with the cost of gasoline.
As an experienced 'farm hand', I can assure people, organics is just another benefit to industry and big corporations.
Another crock of shit.
Y'all like eating shit?
Then buy Organic Valley, or Horizon or Smithfield Farms. Pay more for ever bigger piles of shit.
Because that is what they are--SHIT.
We have to figure out how to bypass all these big industry cons. Laws and regulations only serve industry and hi-finance. Deal with a local farmer, buy direct from him or her. Break the fucking laws!
thanks,
nedlud
(A local farmer who has been screwed and screwed and screwed and who is as mad as hell about it.)
p.s. my farm produces shit, but it is valuable fertilizer, from a cow a horse a pig or a chicken or a goat or a sheep. It is not the shit of industry, organic or otherwise, which is really toxic waste. Do y'all know what TOXIC means? ??
nedlud, Organic Valley is a cooperative of small farms and Horizon is factory farms with cows packed into feedlots standing in manure halfway up to their knees. Big difference. And when we buy locally, we know what we're getting, whether the farmer is certified organic or not. Not to mention the freshness factor and support for the local economy.
I think the local economy part is getting important since once our money leaves it, it goes straight to the top 1/2 of 1% and stays there. You know the saying: shit floats.
Studies have come out showing that organic food is more nutritious than conventional food because it is grown in soil with more nutrients. I once read that conventional farmers consider soil a medium to hold up tractor wheels. I guess it works for them until the wind starts blowing.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
You are mistaken about Organic Valley. I would know, believe me, I would know. We won't go into that. Additionally though, we can say they were caught buying factory farm milk last year. You can even read about that here on CommonDreams if you do a search.
Nice try, but you see you're gullible to the propaganda. You're not alone however, in that regard. People buy into false storylines all the time. Money substitutes for truth quite nicely for the big boys.
George Siemon is CEO (president, if you prefer) of Organic Valley. He's a liar and a crook. I've talked with him personally. Again I would know and again, we won't go any deeper into that.
What's in your fridge?
Damn...I'm getting some indigestion as I've just finished of a container of Horizon cottage cheese...thanks for the heads up; going to really look into my food sources and qualities...thanks.
I can't tell you that what Horizon or Organic Valley sells will kill you, but I can tell you it isn't what they're advertising it to be. I am an insider, I have dealt with Organic Valley and they LIE.
I would just again say, buy from a local farmer if you can. And appreciate it, if you can. And if you have to buy in a store, it is a crap shoot, maybe you get lucky maybe you don't.
We raise as much of our food as we can, and will continure to, even now as I lose my dairy operation. I love my cows but I can't afford to keep them, they are costing me, not paying me.
It is so sad.
Nedlud:
Your loss diminishes all of us, whether we know it or not.
I'm mostly a city guy / office worker but back in 1968 I visited a traditional family farm for a few days. They did it all: 40 head of dairy, grain & hay crops, truck garden and orchards. I could write a book about the people, the land and the deep feeling of "rightness" about the whole operation. When the grandmother who ran it died, the heirs sold it. I expect it's a subdivision now.
I've lived and traveled all over the U.S. but that farm and a certain spot in the Blue Ridge mountains are the only places that ever provoked feelings of homesickness.
I mention these things so you'll know that I'm sincere in agreeing with you: IT IS SO SAD.
And speaking for myself, I am bloody pissed! These corporations are granted the rights of a human citizen but they have no soul, no conscience and no concern for anything but short term profits. A real human being of that description is called SOCIOPATHIC.
God be with you.
Thank you sir.
That's all can say in response to such a wonderful comment. Thank you!
nedlud, local raw goat milk. And what you say is interesting because I read an article with pictures of the factory farms. Can you cite the CD article? I never saw it and I don't miss much.
I admit Obama fooled me, but for the most part I don't fall for propaganda.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
BeForKids~
You were nice to me and polite and I appreciate that. You have to understand though, that ALL of our large systems (corporation, government, even so-called 'cooperatives') operate now on stealth, misdirection and lies--ie., 'perception management'. It is so built into everything because everything is so large now, everything based on mere money transactions and people are conditioned to it. Everything functions on this principle of perception management and not on truth. It is all about fraud and massive moneymaking.
We have to get back to very basic local community and individual interactions and trust and care about each other. This we do by demonstrating truth to each other--a heartfelt honesty. That doesn't mean we cannot disagree! We can disagree.
Just remember: DO NOT TRUST THEM (the systems that have arisen and the people that steer them). THEY ARE NOT THERE FOR YOU. They are there for money. M-O-N-E-Y.
nedlud, you are right. I went on Google and OV did buy factory farm milk in Texas for a year, but stopped in July 2008. They made a poor decision based on wanting to keep their Texas processing plants running, but decided democratically to find other ways. I have to applaud that part.
“Frankly, after this controversy became public, we were surprised by management’s statements indicating that they were going to continue buying milk from the Texas factory farm,” said Mark Kastel, Senior Farm Policy Analyst for Cornucopia. “But the cooperative is a democracy, and its farmer-owners have made it clear that they are ending the purchases and are taking a different path toward building a Texas market for Organic Valley products.
Siemon doesn't appear to be a dictator. Here's the link if you want it.
http://www.sustainabletimes.net/node/366”
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson
Good for you, you did a good head's up job of research and that's all I can ask.
Dictators don't always look like dictators. And sometimes they are being dictated to by a bigger DICTATOR.
That is the case with George Siemon, I can assure you. I have talked to him at length and I know how his mind functions....
"What's in your fridge?"
Not much. Only greens. Except even those can be kept alive for a week outside the fridge with careful moisture control. - next project. The fruits, eggplant, tomato, etc, do just fine sitting on the dining room table for a week between farmer's markets. We hardly need a fridge. Growing your own food, it's important to spread out the planting to spread out your harvests so you need less fridge.
As for the organic industry, we're seeing the same problem that is plaguing the healthcare reform: Triangulation.
wikipedia:
"Triangulation is the name given to the act of a political candidate presenting his or her ideology as being "above" and "between" the "left" and "right" sides"...
Clintok was the famous triangulator and O'Bamba carries forth the tradition, except instead of triangulating between the right and the left like Clintok, O'Bamba triangulates between the center-right, and the extreme right today. This is because Clintok's triangulation shifted the "center" way over, and O'Bamba will further entrench the society in the extreme right gutter where chimpy pushed it.
But triangulation pervades the entire mainstream society, not just Demok politics. The basis of this mega-racket is simple: The "wisdom" of taking the bad with the good. So the organic farmers remain tethered to the elite rackets while triangulating with sustainability. The best of both worlds! We can "feel good" about getting rid of the pesticides while ignoring that we still feed the Pentagon and all the rest of the elite racketeers, to "keep merica safe", "defend our freedoms". The elites warp and manipulate the prices and so when their rackets create catastrophes and the price of progress is unaffordable, the people fall back into elite hands, where they've lowered the price with their petro-rackets.
As others stated in the forum, those low prices are subsidized by the people paying the hidden costs through environmental/societal degradation. And as stated elsewhere, the answer is localism, demand-drive, enlightenment, responsibility. Do business locally to empower your neighbors, who are more easily kept honest. This is the fabric of strong communities, this mutual vulnerability, inter-dependence.
Demand-driven economies put producers where they belong: in the narrow role of serving market demands, instead of setting public policy, controlling the society, oppressing the people. Demand-drive puts the consumer in control, driving the resource allocation and the production methods, and the relative prices of production (including public sector).
Popular control of prices via conscious demand is key to the new economics. Organic farming costs more labor, so one must ask one's self "should I pay for this extra labor"? Wheels turn in the head. It means better health for the farmer, and less fossil gluttony/destruction. So yes, the extra labor of organics, of local small-scale farming/craftsman enterprise, is most definitely worth it. Pay more for honest labor, pay less for the petro-rackets. Develop/apply these concepts fully, and the society is on its way back to utopia. No more triangulation, no more "balance"/moderation. FULL-LEFT.
No more fascism.
Thanks for the comment to: 'What's in your fridge?'
your friend,
nedlud
You "would know," but you won't say? What a load of crap. Either give specific information and evidence, or stop smearing Organic Valley.
For those interested, nedlud puts Organic Valley in the same category as Horizon and Smithfield Farms. It's nedlud who is the liar.
Organic Valley is a cooperative of more than 1000 dedicated organic family farmers. Their farming practices and food products are highly rated by independent watchdog organizations.
Horizon, on the other hand, sells fake "organic" dairy products that partly originate (50%) with factory-farmed milk. (Yet they still have the USDA organic seal on their products.)
(Another fake "organic" dairy called Aurora is even worse. Their products are made from 100% factory-farmed milk, and they supply all the private-label, fake-organic brands sold by Target, Walmart, Costco, Safeway, etc.)
Smithfield Farms is one of the world's worst corporate factory-farming operations, producing mostly hogs. They don't even pretend to be organic.
The difference between Organic Valley on the one hand, and Horizon and Smithfield Farms on the other, is like day and night.
Rather than relying on nedlud's rantings, read Cornucopia Institute's "Maintaining the Integrity of Organic Milk" at http://www.cornucopia.org/2008/01/dairy-report-and-scorecard/
In particular, see their "Organic Dairy Brand Ratings Scorecard" at:
http://www.cornucopia.org/dairysurvey/index.html
You will see that Organic Valley has a total score of 1115 (out of a possible 1200), which is considered "excellent." Horizon has a total score of 0, which is considered "ethically deficient."
First, explain what y'all means. I live way up north, almost in Canada, eh.
Y'all means everyone. I was being a little belligerent. People are taught today how to be stupid, we're really not this stupid naturally. I was gently (not-so gently?) razzing people reading this with that abbreviated, 'down-south' slang. I live way up north too, not quite so close as you, to Canada though.
Obviously, you're joking aroung with me a little bit. That's cool. :)
your friend,
nedlud
Yeah, I knew that. And yes, I was joking. I've been in a joking mood lately with some of my posts. I had a heyday with the Michael Jackson article, and I maybe got carried away and bummed out a few die hard fans. Oops. No harm intended.
Thanks for the post.
your friend as well,
Moondoggy
Dispite you claim to be "an experienced farm hand", pardon me, but I certainly doubt it. Perhaps you were hired as summer help to hay a field, or as a barn hand to help milk and muck out the gutters, but you're no farmer! First, for "organic", it is illegal to use raw manure on crops. All manure must be composted a minimum of one year. Even for those family farms that DO use raw manure however, it's effects upon the quality of the crops is minimal, although some ill effects can occur. Spreading raw manure upon a pasture actually reduces the amount of methane produced in the decomposition process and helps bring up earthworms to aerate the soil. Your RANT aside, the basic difference between "organic" and non, is that the organic farmer feeds the soil rather than the crop. A healthy soil can grow just about any fruit or vegetable. The agra-business farm feed the crop with chemicals which, in the long run depletes the topsoil, kills beneficial organisims in the soil and will eventually result in deminished fertility of the field. The chemicals used do not make for a 'healthy' crop, thus the agra-business farmer winds up using more pesticides and herbacides and fungacides just to get a good 'looking' product. These chemicals do not all break down and some are absorbed into the flesh of the fruit/vegetable. But, you may certainly buy what you wish...
Pardon me, but you have no FUCKING CLUE.
Read another book or watch another tv show and leave me the hell alone.
Actually, I do have a clue, and sense a strong sour grapes attitude from you. Did an (or more than one) organic grower fire you? You come across as having an ax to grind, and it removes all credibility from your comments. Time to grow up.
I said, LEAVE ME ALONE.
Read my other comments.
NO, I really do have a clue also. My experience comes not ONLY from reading, but from having farmed for nearly 45 years. (I also hold down a full 40 hr a week job outside of farming). I am NOT a commercial farmer, nor am I "certified organic" since I have no desire to sell, but I do adhere to organic techniques. ..."and leave me the hell alone"... well, stop making such ignorant statements as you have on this thread.
You have no clue about me.
Read my other comments and you'll get a little better understanding.
That is good that you have farmed, however, 'leave me the hell alone' is not an ignorant statement, it is a strongly worded request.
And the banks are keeping people from sealing the deal on a sale. The banks. How many stories like this are out there. Businesses big and small are going under because the banks are refusing credit.
Silence is Consent.
Organics are best suited to small labor intensive farms. That's one reason organic foods cost more. Depending in large part on location, small organic farm coops could turn a profit. But like a poster mentioned, to make real money in organics, oil guzzling machines need to be used which takes away much of the environmental benefits of organics. Getting rich by farming, agribusiness organic or not, is robbing Peter to pay Paul.
I have no compassion to those farmers who got into organic farming because it was profitable. Now it's not so profitable and they are getting out? Boo hoo.
But to those who organic farm because it is an ethical and healthy choice, my heartfelt thanks. I support you.
If only we could set it up so that organic farms get the support and subsidies they need as opposed to the large GMO agribusinesses.
so it goes.
How much does the certifying process add to the premium of "organics"? And didn't Big Business come into legal ownership of the word "organic" a few years back, and are they not manipulating what it means so that in 10 years all food could be considered "organic"? Of course "they" probable don't want to do totally away with the distinction of "organic" and conventional, then they'd miss the opportunity to charge some suckers more for their food.
Another reason besides the economy that people might be turned off organic is rampant greenwashing. There was a story on Democracy Now! this week reporting a study that said 98 percent of products making a green claim were fraudulent, many of them using the word "natural" which appears several times here. The USDA has a feeble organic certification process, which some dairy producers have weasled out of using big loopholes, and the word "natural" has no legal meaning at all.
'Greenwashing'~
You don't know the start of it, the more they think you trust them (organic processors and retailers), the more they LIE.
Buy only direct from a farmer, a neighbor, you know. And be glad if you can.
Good tips. I buy from a local Co-op.
I am not informed I confess. But I know organic tomatoes are about twice non-organic where I am able to shop. The 1st sentence of the article references profit as motive, the last alludes to it, and I fall in the middle. Stone cold never been able to afford organic food. Especially when I was raising kids! That would have been hilarioius math. I feel profit as motive is the sword the industry is falling on.
I grow weed and it don't cost that much more to do it organically. Does it cost more to transport organic food?
I eat dirt now, it's cheap, FoxFarm is my favorite, and nutritious.
Yes, it is a shame the price of "organic", however, they are much healthier (if fresh). The real sad point in your posting is that it is the children who should be eating organic foods. At my age I doubt if the processed foods could make much of a difference, but it is the children, while they are growing, that could benefit from natural foods. We as a society, have no idea what processed foods do to that growth process. We DO know that process foods add to obesity, to diabetes and is suspected of adding to ADD. The effects of processed foods on the developing nervous system needs more intensive study (IMHO). Buying LOCAL raw foods, organic or not, is far superior to buying any processed foods or any foods that need to be 'trucked' any distance. Organics have better nutritional value when fresh. The only real way to enjoy organic food, in my opinion, is to be a family farmer. Even city dwellers can grow a few foods in five gallon buckets or a window box, just to get the taste of real food.
For a very eerie harbinger, see the Wikipedia article on the Aral Sea, formerly the world's fourth largest lake.
Most of the water is gone and what remains is toxic due to salinization. The earth is covered in wind driven salt. The rain, the farms, the fish and people are mostly gone.
The Soviet Union (a single, fascist corporation that masqueraded as socialism) did that, deliberately. And it was a great success because they still get lots of cotton for export. (Probably GM.)
My metro area is surrounded - for hundreds of miles- by vast commercial farms that apply fertilizers, herbicides and pesticides with crop dusters. My doctor confirmed that incidence maps of respiratory problems and cancers show significant spikes directly proportional to proximity of those farms, especially the downwind zones.
It's a Soviet day in the neighborhood.
We're probably done for but cheer up! As the Soviet optimist said, "life is difficult but, fortunately, short."
Tough shitzky, komrades. (Or, as Dick Cheney would say, "So?"
if we could only grow Hemp....
A lot of us are buying local from people we know and how they raise their food.
Dairy and meats have been very overpriced and the consumer has cut back.
The greedy corporations were wrong when they thought americans would pay any price for food just because most are obese this was a wrong assumption.
I know a lot of country folks and I can buy a dozen organic brown eggs for $3.00-the store charges me $5.00.
Soon, I may be paying $10.00 and a huge gas tax just for driving to the farm to pick up my eggs. Sorry Obama, no subway or bus goes that way.
Great comment grounded in reality!
Whose your farmer?
In my case, I am. And those honest, hardworking organic farmers of Montana's Flathead Valley.
I've been harvesting fresh, ripe strawberries out of my garden the last few mornings and the taste is really amazing. You can feel it healing your body as it goes down. Yum!
I always thought peaches and cottage cheese were a fine combo, but I've been eating my fresh strawberries with cottage cheese sometimes and this is a great combination.
Moondoggy, when I lived in Minnesota I was in a food buying co-op and we took turns picking up bulk food to split up for all. Same when I lived in Berkeley and here in Eugene buying farm fresh cow's milk before I found a goat farmer. I wrap the milk in Rubbermaid ice blankets for transport. Saves on buying and messing with ice.
When the people fear their government there is tyranny,
when the government fears the people there is liberty.
~ Thomas Jefferson