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We went through the certification process for several reasons:
1. we are an educational facility and the process is something that needs to be taught. We also discuss the advantages and disadvantages of the certification in general.
2. Some of our former students are with the local certifier and we felt it was a good way to make connections for students, as several have been hired to be the "dreaded certifiers" but its a pretty decent job.
3. Certification is the only way you can use the word Organic
Organic has a market advantage in some areas, maybe not everywhere but in some areas it is large. People will pay a premium for O produce.
We have a great sat market that is open to certified and non-certified produce. The booths that say "no spray" or "sustainably grown" do not get the same $ for their crops.
I do think certified is becoming somewhat diluted but for the most part consumers know that synthetic fertilizers are not used, but of course they do not know that pesticides are allowed.
Sylvia, you will not be able to use Better than Organic because it has the O word in it,
E. coli can of course enter into your produce if you have employees that do not wash their hands and handle food.
TCLynx... agreed, local food is key, getting the purchaser to know the grower is the answer. And, there is more than one way to do it right, Local is great, we also do inorganic hydroponics and it sells very well at several local stores and when our consumers that see our system and understand how little water is used to produce basil and lettuce or tomatoes.
I started my concern with e coli as a water topics thread. It's not a direct response to this post, but you reminded me that I need to start talking about it in public, rather than just messages to experienced aquapons.
LOL...Its funny how some people think of the concept of growing food with fish poo, and they go ahhhh. in disgust not understanding the relation of how food is grown in general(lack of education).
many people don't realize that the food the pay top dollar for and says ORGANIC is grown with all kinds of animal shit, Oppsss....Manure and what there animals eat to produce it could be so contaminated or compromised.
I guess my point is that we need to educate ourselves and then our friends and customers.
I belong to a hydroponic CSA for the 2nd year. It is not currently "certified organic". I'm not sure it's even possible for hydroponics on a commercial scale, but if the CSA was certified like their sister "in ground" operation in a nearby city, they could easily triple their membership.
People that are not deeply involved in researching their food supply, like many on this site are, don't understand all the in's and out's of one versus the other. Personally, I like the hydroponic produce much better. The in ground CSA lettuce is almost inedible for me (too much sand in it). I like the food that's never touched the ground.
The one negative I see to hydroponics for commercial production is the barrier to entry for most smaller farms. $80,000 for 6 acres of hydroponic stacks and all the plumbing, is not practical for most commercial farms. However, organic certification is easier to attain than it is to triple membership. Tripling membership will take years for the hydroponic farm, but organic certification could be attained in a few months time if it becomes a priority. They are actually adding in ground certified organic production to accompany the hydroponics for marketing purposes on a nearby property.
Where I live, there are many certified farms and several companies that ONLY sell organic produce and food products.
Sorry that I'm beginning to ramble. My wife works in the "CSA industry" and it's always a "hot topic" in our house.
TCLynx said:
Chris, I think your focus on Local and educating your local customers is a definite winner!! Totally need to bring out food production closer to home as much as possible.
Not just for sustainable and "organic" reasons but also for food security. Most locations and grocery stores really only have enough to cover about three days. As in, if there were a disaster that cut up food deliveries from where ever it is coming from, the stores will be cleaned out of most important things in less than three days. Anyone who knows how to grow food and preserve food is a valuable resource for any community.
Another bonus on the food safety for people buying local from farmers they know, the farm family is constantly testing the quality of the food and likely being far more through about it than the large scale operations. If the farmer/family are sick with food poisoning they won't be selling that food the next morning at market or be giving farm tours. Can you get much better testing or quality control than that?
I especially like the selling live produce idea and the pick your own.
I don't know that we must agree on some new label or term for Aquaponics, I think for farmers, simply getting to know your neighbors and customers is probably the best way to go about it and letting them get to know your farm and practices so that they are comfortable getting their food from you. Granted, such methods won't make anyone rich but for myself personally, all I want is enough and enough for me would be to stay out of debt and save up enough to someday retire while still being able to afford electricity, internet and health care. Food, well I'm growing that.
Thanks for this thread Chris. I agree that "organic" has lost most of it's shine, heck to many it has become a dirty word.
Now I don't personally see that aquaponics is always better than everything. I'm into permaculture (which also has some negative aspects since it I guess is a trademarked thing) or the concepts behind it at least with things like food forests and systems which could provide food without requiring huge amounts of regular inputs once they are established. Every situation is different and so the solutions will be different too.
What we need is an 'Aquaponic Natural' certifying agency, or something like that, to set a standard small AP growers can prove they follow. Something to officially trump the Organic label. Anything like this in the works?
It's hard to believe I haven't seen this post until now. I have been away from the group since November with a computer crash and one and a half month recovery, but this was the exact subject we had been discussing just about the time this was posted!
We have been dicussing how to get around the "Certified Organic" label, since in fact, the aquaponic raised produce is "BETTER THAN ORGANIC". That was our first choice for our Market banner. The question is, can we make this claim and use the word "organic" without running into government hyjacked words trouble. We had decided since that our banner at the upcoming Farmers Market season will read, "Ask us why we think - Aquaponic Produce is Better Than Organic" Then have available fliers explaining how certain herbicides and pesticides are still used in organic certified growing operations and how it is impossible to employ those same methods in an aquaponic system, and of course water conservation and environmental impact.
I always enjoy seeing someone is thinking the same things at the same time. It tells me the thought is timely and the issue is important.
JoeJ
LOL...Its funny how some people think of the concept of growing food with fish poo, and they go ahhhh. in disgust not understanding the relation of how food is grown in general(lack of education).
many people don't realize that the food the pay top dollar for and says ORGANIC is grown with all kinds of animal shit, Oppsss....Manure and what there animals eat to produce it could be so contaminated or compromised.
I guess my point is that we need to educate ourselves and then our friends and customers.
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