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Four Season Farm in Harborside, Maine - WE FARM THE WAY “ORGANIC” USED TO MEAN

art.spliff

Active member
ICMag Donor
How We Farm

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WE FARM THE WAY “ORGANIC” USED TO MEAN


Four Season Farm in Harborside, Maine has been farmed organically since its inception in 1968. However, we are NOT “USDA Certified Organic” – I repeat – NOT.


And for good reason. The USDA refuses to uphold the honest, old-time, carefully stewarded farming practices that organic has always represented. The USDA National Organic Program has been totally corrupted by the money, power, and influence of industrial food corporations. USDA certification is a hollow sham. For example:


Hydroponic vegetables, grown without soil using artificial lighting and nutrient solutions from the chemistry lab, are sold everywhere as “USDA Certified Organic” with no mention of hydroponic anywhere on the label. (If the “organic” berries come from Driscols, they are hydroponic. If the “organic” tomatoes and cucumbers come from Wholsum Harvest or imported from Holland, Canada or Mexico, they are hydroponic.)


Undesirable additives are allowed in your “organic” prepared foods. (A lawsuit to stop that was overruled with USDA collusion.) Enormous ‘Confined Animal Feeding Operations’ (CAFOs) with no access for the animals to outdoor pastures (as the regulations demand) are producing the majority of the “organic” milk and eggs in this country. (Most milk from Horizon and all from Aurora Dairy is produced in CAFOs. Eggs from Cal-Maine, Herbruck, or Petaluma/Organic Valley are from CAFOs.) The USDA turns a blind eye to this illegal production. The USDA recently scrapped new animal welfare standards for organic certification at the behest of these CAFOs.


The deep integrity of the passionate, old-time, organic farmers who started this movement is now nothing but greenwash for the USDA “fauxganic” program.


We believe our production practices reflect how organic farming should be done to produce clean, wholesome food and maintain a pristine environment.


We proudly advertise our produce as GUARANTEED “REALORGANIC”.


We invite other farmers to join us.


“REALORGANIC” STANDARDS:


1. First, for uncompromised nutritional value all crops must be grown in a biologically active, fertile soil attached to the earth and nourished by the natural biological activities of that soil. There are so many important soil processes that we could not replace even if we wanted to, because we are still unaware of all the benefits they contribute.


2. Second, soil fertility should be maintained principally with farm-derived organic matter and mineral particles from ground rock. Why take the chance of bringing in polluted material from industrial sources when fertility can be created and maintained internally?


3. Third, deep-rooting green manures, cover crops, and grazed pastures must be included within broadly based crop rotations to enhance biological diversity. The greater the variety of plants and animals on the farm, the more stable the system.


4. Fourth, a “plant positive” rather than a “pest negative” philosophy is vital. The focus must be on correcting the cause of pest problems (sick plants) by strengthening the plant through creating optimum soil conditions to prevent pests, rather than merely treating the symptom (pest damage) by trying to kill the pests that prey on weak plants. More and more scientific evidence is available today on the mechanisms by which a biologically active fertile soil creates induced resistance in the crops.


5. Fifth, livestock must be raised outdoors on grass-based pasture systems to the fullest extent possible. Farm animals are an integral factor in the symbiosis of soil fertility on the organic farm.


–Eliot Coleman

Further Reading

Farm Philosophy by Eliot Coleman
The Real Story of O by Joan Dye Gussow
Livestock and Climate Change? by Eliot Coleman
Defending Organic by Eliot Coleman
 

Weird

3rd-Eye Jedi
Veteran
I know organic farms that hold both usda and local state certification



in some states like washington the certification program is high standard


I have heard good things about http://www.mofga.org/ are you a member thereof?
 

Microbeman

The Logical Gardener
ICMag Donor
Veteran
Art; Are you part of this farm or are you just posting their info?

I tried convincing many certified organic farms in the 90s to form into alliances to certify as uber-organic or microbial based or natural farming but nobody wanted to buck the good ole USDA or Canadian certifying organizations. I saw the money on the wall.

One inaccuracy in the post is that not 'all' organic tomatoes from Canada are hydroponically grown.
 

art.spliff

Active member
ICMag Donor
No affiliation, I was reviewing authors' notes on fertilizers when I read their website. I share their view about paying for a certification or label.


This may be useful although it helps to have a soil test:


Steve Solomon's Complete Organic Fertilizer (COF)


This fertilizer is from Steve Solomon's latest book, "The Intelligent Gardener, Growing Nutrient Dense Food" and is available by the pound. We also have all these ingredients available individually as well.


6 quarts of COF is recommended by Steve for 100 square feet, which weighs approximately 11 lbs.


The recipe is as follows:


2 quarts organic soybean meal
1 pint feather meal
1 pint organic fish meal
1 quart Calphos (soft rock phosphate)
1 quart organic kelp meal
1 pint ag lime
1 pint ag gypsum
1 tsp borax
1.5 tsp zinc sulfate
2 tsp manganese sulfate
1 tsp copper sulfate


Source: KIS Organics
 

h.h.

Active member
Veteran
I try to grow ethically which often crosses over into organics.
I'm glad they set standards even if they are lacking.
It stops the free for all of advertisement and false claims.
 
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