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Nation’s largest organic farm cooperative offers solution to the loss of the small family farm

What’s good for the land is what’s good for your health”

--Organic Valley

 
Organic farming is seeping into the mainstream and according to many, will need to become the new conventional way to farm.  It’s quite simple really--organic farming allows for sustainability.  Organic Valley, the nation’s largest farmer coop is working hard to bring the small family-owned farm back.  And it’s been quite successful in doing so.  Organic Valley started in 1988 with 7 family-owned farms and has grown to 1149 farmer families.  The cooperative was started in response to the 600,000 small farms lost to the industrialization of farming since 1960.  Their central mission is “to support rural communities by protecting the health of the family farm—working toward both economic and environmental sustainability.”  The Organic Valley solution to the woes of small farmers (that being the coop) seems to be a good one that is gaining public support. 

 But the question of economics still lingers over the farming industry.  However, it is no longer (and in my opinion should never have been) a question of quick payoff.  In the words of Organic Valley: “Chemical-intensive conventional farming creates high yields of cheap food in the short term, but the cost is our compromised ecosystems and squandered natural resources. It creates a debt that we and our children can ill afford to repay.”  Conventional, or factory farming, relies on methods that cause rapid loss of topsoil, sooner rather than later, rendering the land unusable; it requires massive amounts of antibiotics, pesticides, machinery, etc.  It is the large-scale equivalent to selling some old CDs to make a quick buck, you make a few dollars, yes, but the CDs run out fast with no means of producing more.  The Earth’s resources are being over-used and if factory farming continues to dominate the market, we will nearly be out of fertile land, and very soon.  The problem with pumping animals full of antibiotics and hormones is multi-fold.  The first and most obvious is a problem that humans are facing as well—overuse of antibiotics causes bacteria to mutate into strands that are immune to present medication.  The unhealthy conditions and synthetic injections endured by livestock are passed on to the humans that ingest them, or their milk or eggs.  Poor animal health equals poor human health. 

 In organic farming both the land and the animals are kept healthy and relatively happy.  If soil is built organically, it develops its own natural defense against insects, fungus, and disease, thus eliminating, or nearly eliminating the need for harmful chemicals.  The same goes for the animals on a farm.  If they are kept healthy from the beginning, there is no, or much less need for expensive and toxic chemicals or medication.  The overall effect of organic, small-scale farming is that the land is sustainable, animals can produce products such as milk and eggs for many more years than the unhealthy animals of factory farms, and the local market, as well as national economy benefits greatly. 

 The organic food industry, according to Organic Valley, is worth $14.5 billion this past year and is growing by 20% each year.  While this only accounts for a little more than 2% of American food sales, it’s a booming market with a lot of potential.  This is what companies like Organic Valley are trying to teach.  The small-farm market and organic foods market have a place in the economy and farmer coops are an effective solution to the dying family farm, which has been a factor of the ill health of the environment as a whole, and all the animals living in it (that includes, of course, humans).  Organic farming is a way to try to reverse the detrimental effects that factory farming has had on agriculture and community.  It also provides people a way to protect their own health and the health of generations to come while giving the public a choice of how their food is produced. 

 
Check out their website at: http://www.organicvalley.coop/index.html

Comments

 

Generic Viagra said:

That's great, I never thought about Nation’s largest organic farm cooperative offers solution to the loss of the small family farm like that before.

April 4, 2009 8:03 AM
 

herk rodriguez said:

I have several small properties (2-20 acre tracts) in the fertile Rio Grande valley in New Mexico. About 40 minutes south of Albuquerque. The state has a surface water priority system. The growth of golf courses and housing development require the retirement of priority surface water. The City of ABQ, Intel. Centex are a few of the largest water buyers. The farmers are selling their water rights for cash and leasing water. This is a very shortsighted, Now the lesser is only offering water on a year to year basis. How do we keep farming? when the money just isn't available to the small farmer?

August 7, 2009 11:00 AM

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About kris

Kris is a Writer, Editor, and Project Manager for Live Green, Live Smart.

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