Wednesday, April 22, 2009

Earth Day


Today marks the 29th occurrence of Earth Day, a "day designed to inspire awareness and appreciation for the Earth's environment" (quoted from the Wikipedia article). Earth Day was founded by Senator Gaylord Nelson due to his concern about dangers to the environment, particularly overpopulation, although it united advocates for many different aspects of environmental concern. These included extinction of animal species, herbicides and pesticides, and global cooling :).

The first Earth Day is considered to have been the beginning of the modern environmental movement. This movement is now composed largely of liberals and/or former hippies. Due to that unfortunate fact, the issues raised by these environmental groups are often dismissed offhand by Christian conservatives, despite their validity in some cases.

Of course, global cooling is no longer a concern raised on Earth Day; global warming has taken its place as the war cry of environmentalists. Global warming is too large a topic to discuss in one post, but I certainly don't agree with it, as I've seen no convincing evidence to prove that the Earth will indeed meet its fate in fiery temperatures that will soon force us into underground cave-homes.

Another huge topic among environmentalists is clean energy. Even if carbon emissions from the burning of petroleum products are not a concern, there are other reasons to pursue clean energy sources. First, these clean energy sources- such as wind, water, hydrogen, and electricity- are sustainable, while petroleum may become scarce at some point in the future. Secondly, these sources of energy are not tied to empires of wealth in the Middle East or the political situations in that region. Thus, while oil prices are prone to myriads of variables, the price for clean energy would be quite stable.


Christian Conservation

Stewardship of our environment is an important responsibility for all humans, but especially for Christians. As Christians we are to be an example to the world in all areas of life, and only Christians, or those influenced by Christian principles, can have a true understanding of good stewardship. Through scripture we know that:

  • God created the universe and all that is in it, out of nothing (Genesis Chapter 1).

  • Thus, God is Lord of all creation including mankind, but God has given mankind the responsibility of caring for the rest of creation (Genesis 1:28).

Christians should be ashamed that the environmental movement is so heavily populated by pantheists. It should have been Christians that spearheaded the movement towards environmental consciousness and stewardship, but instead they have largely remained silent. Therefore, instead of worshipping "Mother Earth" today, I praised God for the beauty of the earth, I planted tomatoes and squash, and I wrote this blog post.

As a farmer, stewardship of the environment is a daily task for me; in every decision I make, I choose farming methods that improve the land, rather than simply mining it. I hope that my children, if the Lord so blesses me, will build on my efforts and continue improving the piece of creation which God has given us to tend.

Note: My understanding of Christian stewardship was largely shaped by Francis Schaeffer's Pollution and the Death of Man, and I highly recommend it. Schaeffer breaks the issue down to basics, and then explains the importance of stewardship, in his clear, logical manner.

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Turning in the Cover Crop

We turned our cover crop under on Saturday, which is the biggest milestone of spring. First we mowed down the entire garden, then we used a 4' tiller to make beds, leaving 2' paths between the beds. We're trying to buy all of our tractor equipment in 4' widths so that we can use the same beds every year, thus confining compaction (from the tractor tires) to the paths. This will also allow us to improve the beds without wasting compost or minerals on the paths, which will never grow any food.

"Whew! Farming is hard work!"

Friday, April 17, 2009

Farm Friday Kickoff!

Spring is here in full bloom! The trees are glowing in fresh green, the air is warm, and the birds are singing, so it's time to begin my Farm Friday posts for 2009. Spring is the busiest time of year for farmers, and the next two months will certainly be busy for us!




The poultry have already arrived at Windy Creek Farm. The pullets that I raised last year have finally begun laying, so they occupy one hoop coop moving over the pasture.



I started my first broilers about five weeks ago, so they are also on the pasture in a new, smaller hoop coop.



My modified Salatin-style pen holds 80 chickens, half of which should be pullets. These should start laying in July.



My very first flock of turkeys arrived yesterday. I ordered just 20 poults to start with, while I learn how to raise them. Turkeys are considered to be a very difficult animal to raise.



Smokestack wants to start a small hatchery, and he's building his flock of breeding hens. He is starting with Rhode Island Reds and Black Australorps, although the famous Buff Orpingtons Nelson and John Winthrop have joined his breeding program. I never thought that I'd meet chickens who could strike a pose for a photo.



Smokestack's rabbits are multiplying every day. Last time I counted he had 5 new bunnies, and thanks to some serious barricades and Cocoa, we haven't had any more trouble with dogs.



The bees are growing as quickly as the rabbits this spring. Smokestack and our Grandpa split our two hives, and then both hives swarmed, so now we're up to 6 hives- and there are four more hives coming in the mail! (It took a lot of courage to get this picture.)




A few weeks ago we acquired Benjamin, a Dorset ram. I am going to sell my goats and replace them with sheep this year, so he will be my breeding ram. He's cute now, but I'm told that in 6 months he should weigh 200 pounds.



The goats are doing well, as goats are supposed to do. That's a novel idea at our farm. They're happy as long as they can sneak a bite of chicken feed when I'm not looking.



I built a small impromptu greenhouse to hold our transplants. We've got four varieties of tomatoes, bell peppers, banana peppers, jalapeno peppers, pimento peppers, several varieties of lettuce, some very late cabbage, and several types of flowers.



We've planted sugar snap peas in the garden, and tomorrow we'll be turning in our cover crop of cereal rye and crimson clover. After that we'll be putting in most of our vegetables in short order.


We have many plans for expanding our gardens as my farming goals have shifted to include more horticulture. We cleared some small trees to extend our current garden and we will be fencing part of the pasture in order to grow vegetables instead of grass. We also have a hoophouse in the process of construction.




Our mascots Cocoa and Abigail are doing their best to promote our farm, while Tiger just takes catnaps. Abigail will be kidding very soon, and judging by her girth we'll have two new mascots. ;)



Well, it's usually the cat who's napping. :D


On Wednesday we took a trip to BC Hunt Farms in Prattville to pick strawberries. I met the Hunts in November at the ASAN conference and visited their farm afterwards. They have a U-pick strawberry operation, and as far as I have seen they are the only commercial strawberry farm in the state that doesn't use any herbicides or pesticides. We brought home 10 gallons and probably ate two gallons in the field! I hadn't eaten any fresh strawberries since last spring, so eating my first strawberry of this season, with a palate unjaded by Californian strawberry-like-objects, was a wonderful experience.



Have a great weekend,
Sherlock

Saturday, April 04, 2009

The Oak Tree







Thursday night's storms brought down a big oak tree in our pasture. We were sad because it was the most beautiful tree we had in the pasture. However, we were thankful that no one, including our goats, and bees were hurt. (The tree was located close to each.) The only damage was to the fence, which could have been much worse and a metal gate in our catch-pen. The tree knocked both our power and phone lines down. It also fell across our road, so we were trapped in until morning, when Stonewall and his dad could start cutting it up. The power company did come out at 3:30 a.m. to fix the power. We got to listen to chains saws, in what seemed the middle of the night. Another adventure here on the farm!!

Tuesday, March 31, 2009

HR 875 and Food Safety

I am sure that most of our readers are familiar with HR 875, a bill currently referred to committee in Congress. A cry has arisen from bloggers and concerned citizens, warning that this bill will “effectually criminalize organic farming” and could “technically make it illegal to grow a tomato in your backyard.” Those statements certainly sounded alarming to me; if they were true I would be out of business. They also sounded improbable: after all, the USDA has an entire Department devoted to regulating and collecting fees from organic farms, and it is physically impossible for an already undermanned USDA or Health Department to inspect every small farm and backyard to be sure that no illegal produce is being grown.

In order to find the truth of the matter, I looked up the text of the bill itself. It is titled “Food Safety Modernization Act of 2009.” The purpose of the bill is stated as being “To establish the Food Safety Administration within the Department of Health and Human Services to protect the public health by preventing food-borne illness, ensuring the safety of food, improving research on contaminants leading to food-borne illness, and improving security of food from intentional contamination, and for other purposes.” I thought that stating a purpose was unnecessary after reading the last bit.

The definitions come next. The legislators must be careful to define words with hazy meanings such as “food”. Of most importance are the terms “Food Establishment” and Food Production Facility”. The first term refers to any slaughterhouse, meat or vegetable processing facility, or warehouse (restaurants are not included.) Most of HR 875 concerns these establishments.

The term “Food Production Facility” refers to “any farm, ranch, orchard, vineyard, aquaculture facility, or confined animal-feeding operation.” In Section 206 we find the regulations regarding Food Production Facilities. If one reads through the several parts of this section, a few points will probably raise red flags.

First, the new Food Safety Administration is given authority for several actions, most of which can already take place in some form. I will list them one at a time and comment.

(1) visit and inspect food production facilities in the United States and in foreign countries to determine if they are operating in compliance with the requirements of the food safety law;

Inspectors can visit farms to make sure they comply with the standards which are listed later in the bill. Farm inspection already takes place; for example, to sell at our local farmers’ market, an inspector must see our farm and grant me a Grower’s Permit. If I wish to sell eggs at the Market, the Health Department must inspect the refrigerators in which they are kept. These inspections are friendly visits, and farmers who are routinely inspected often come to know their inspector personally.

(2) review food safety records as required to be kept by the Administrator under section 210 and for other food safety purposes;

The records mentioned are for the purpose of tracing food-borne illness back to the source. Section 210 does not specify exactly what must be recorded, but I suspect that records will only be required for commercial farmers. Farmers selling produce only to local consumers, either directly or through farmers’ markets, cannot cause widespread food-borne illness and are much harder to track.

(3) set good practice standards to protect the public and animal health and promote food safety;

This sounds like “Best Management Practices” (BMP), which are already in place. Currently, BMP's are designed to protect the environment, particularly the groundwater and waterways.

(4) conduct monitoring and surveillance of animals, plants, products, or the environment, as appropriate;

This seems very similar to point (1). Perhaps this point intends to allow frequent inspections, rather than a one time visit. This close monitoring could only be practiced on the larger farms (remember, it costs money to hire inspectors), or on farms which have previously shown cause for concern. A farmer who is held accountable to his customers undergoes much more thorough inspection than this.

(5) collect and maintain information relevant to public health and farm practices.

I would like to see consumers more informed about farm practices, but the truth about chicken grown on factory farms would hurt large corporations. The information which this clause intends to be collected and maintained would probably be far less useful.

Next we see everyone's favorite section, Regulations. Here is the text:

(c) Regulations- Not later than 1 year after the date of the enactment of this Act, the Administrator, in consultation with the Secretary of Agriculture and representatives of State departments of agriculture, shall promulgate regulations to establish science-based minimum standards for the safe production of food by food production facilities. Such regulations shall--

(1) consider all relevant hazards, including those occurring naturally, and those that may be unintentionally or intentionally introduced;

(2) require each food production facility to have a written food safety plan that describes the likely hazards and preventive controls implemented to address those hazards;

(3) include, with respect to growing, harvesting, sorting, and storage operations, minimum standards related to fertilizer use, nutrients, hygiene, packaging, temperature controls, animal encroachment, and water;

(4) include, with respect to animals raised for food, minimum standards related to the animal’s health, feed, and environment which bear on the safety of food for human consumption;

(5) provide a reasonable period of time for compliance, taking into account the needs of small businesses for additional time to comply;

(6) provide for coordination of education and enforcement activities by State and local officials, as designated by the Governors of the respective States; and

(7) include a description of the variance process under subsection (d) and the types of permissible variances which the Administrator may grant under such process.

There are two parts of this that might sound problematic at first, namely point (3) and (4). I believe that this clause in point (3) may be leading to the statements about this bill outlawing organic farming: "minimum standards related to fertilizer use". Once again, pay attention to the grammar. It is not setting a minimum amount of fertilizer applied to crops (which any farmer would tell you is an absurd notion), but setting minimum standards for safe fertilizer use. This is more likely to limit how much, how often, or what kind of fertilizer may be applied.

The other parts of point (3) are already regulated under other laws to some extent. Again, regulations in these areas will be applied primarily to commercial growers (those selling to wholesale dealers and grocery stores), as smaller growers selling retail are too numerous to regulate so precisely. Point (4) calls for minimum standards in raising animals. These standards will undoubtedly fall far short of humane treatment, since that would outlaw most CAFO's.

It may seem at this point that I am in favor of the bill, but that is far from the truth. If you haven't already, please contact your representative and tell them to vote No on this bill if it makes it through Committee. The problem with HR 875 is not the part about farms; the problem is the rest of the bill, the parts that apply to the "Food Establishments". These regulations are framed in the same way as regulations on eggs and chicken processing. Just as the regulations make no distinction between a farmer growing and processing a few thousand chickens per year and a slaughterhouse moving 100,000 chickens through in a day, this bill makes no distinction between huge processing facilities owned by multi-national conglomerates and small, family-owned processing facilities. HR 875 could potentially put those small processing facilities out of business, so it needs to be voted down.

The purpose of HR 875 is to modernize and improve food safety, but can it really accomplish that? No matter how much information the FDA has to trace food to its source, it is useless until someone gets sick. Then, because of our massively centralized food system, many other people could become sick before the food is recalled. This reactionary policy may be the best tool that the FDA has, but it falls far short of solving our food safety problem.

With that said, I'm not the sort of person to give a question without answering it. I believe that we can assure food safety for our nation, but the answer won't be found in the government. The only way to keep food safe is to take a simple, but revolutionary, step. Encourage small farmers to supply the food to their local communities. This is not a step forward, but a step back in time. Such a step would decentralize our food network, create more sustainable communities, and provide a living for thousands of young people who would like to farm but see no way to make a living at it.

Once small farmers are feeding the nation, their farms can be inspected by their customers. Apparently the FDA and USDA think customers too stupid to assess the cleanliness of a farm, but this manner of inspection is more rigorous than anything that the government provides. The dirty farmers would be pushed out of business before you could say salmonella. You, the eater, hold the key to food safety in your hands. Vote for local agriculture with your food dollar: buy from your local farmers.

Edited to add: I forgot to mention another point against this bill. It mentions NAIS (the National Animal Identification System), a monstrosity which the USDA sponsors. NAIS would require every animal to be tracked from birth until death, but thankfully, NAIS has received widespread opposition and is not in effect. It is interesting to note that attempts to make NAIS compulsory in certain states have failed: the states ran over their budgets in legal fees. However, HR 875 relates to the FDA while NAIS relates to the USDA, so this bill is separate from and does not affect NAIS.