Organic readers praise “The Truth About Organic Foods”

Filed under: News — admin at 9:25 am on Wednesday, March 28, 2007

Below is a great letter that was sent to my publisher from a die-hard organic believer who really liked the book and wants 4 copies for her other die-hard organic-minded friends.
Best, Alex

Dear Mr. Avery,

At the urging of my brother, who heard you speak at a tree man’s convention last year, I read your newly-published book, “The Truth About Organic Foods.”

My brother and I have had an unspoken disagreement about natural and organic foods since he became an adult and assumed the tree business which my father began in 1945. He works with sprays and chemicals and I, nine years his senior and married when he was just a boy, have always attempted to raise our ten children on wholesome, natural and organic foods. Our vegetable gardens have been all organically grown and, yes, I’ve covered the children’s sand box on the few occasions that we’ve decided we needed to spray our property for mosquitoes or an ant infestation. For 32 years of marriage, we’ve been “natural and organic”! (“Health food nuts” they used to call us in the beginning).

I told him I’d read the book with an open mind, as I have no “agenda” save the truth! However, I must admit that I went at it with a jaundiced eye, expecting to find stories of how the farms which call themselves “organic” are not really organic and that they’re being run by big money, etc. (which is true). What I didn’t expect, though, was the thorough study that you presented! I am really impressed by your work! I am not entirely convinced, however, because we’ve been organic farmers ourselves; back in 1978 we ran one of the only organic potato farms in the Northeast and our fields were absolutely gorgeous – the loam (we grew in muck fields, if you are familiar with them) was dark, dark brown, light and fluffy when dry and grew the largest, most delicious and succulent vegetables you have ever seen. When we first moved to the farm we couldn’t believe the size of the vegetables (the vegetable gardens were planted in the muck fields too, because of the resulting fabulous bounty). The potato crop was always great; the potatoes were delicious and insect resistant. The difference between the vegetables grown in those organic muck fields as compared to anything we’d ever seen anywhere, was truly phenomenal. Our neighbor’s fields, on the other hand, also muck, were light brown and horrible-looking. They always had problems with their crops. They used chemical fertilizer, and our farm hadn’t had any for more than 10 years. The difference was quite noticeable.

So, while I see that your studies show one thing, my experience at our own farm was the opposite, so I’m wondering where the discrepancy can be. I would like to know your thoughts on this. I would also like to obtain about 4 of your books if they are of a reasonable price, because I have told some of my hard-line, organic-minded friends about it and asked them if they would be open to reading it, and the response was “yes”! Would you please be so kind as to send me four books…?

Sincerely,

XXX

 

Spinach tainted in San Benito

Filed under: News — admin at 11:14 am on Friday, March 9, 2007

The Californian
By Jake Henshaw
The Salinas Californian Capitol Bureau

Grower Identified, California health officials say

Excerpt…

SACRAMENTO - Fresh spinach in the nationwide E. coli outbreak this past fall became contaminated on a roughly 50-acre plot in San Benito County, state health officials said at a legislative hearing Tuesday.

Officials said the field was in the second year of a three-year transition from a conventional to organic operation.

Until now, officials have said the tainting occurred in either San Benito or Monterey counties but haven’t specified which.

Tuesday’s revelation came during questioning at a joint hearing of the Assembly and Senate agriculture committees chaired by state Sen. Abel Maldonado, R-Santa Maria, and Assemblywoman Nicole Parra, D-Hanford. The hearing was intended to examine the E. coli outbreak on the Central Coast and one linked to Central Valley lettuce, as well as state and industry responses to the scares. Department of Health Services doctors said they’ve identified the grower who was farming that plot but will only divulge that information when the full report on the outbreak that killed four people and sickened about 200 is released.

Also Tuesday, Seattle-based attorney Bill Marler, who represents 90 plaintiffs in the Central Coast outbreak, said he’s added Salinas grower Mission Organics to a list of defendants his clients are suing. Marler is pushing forward eight lawsuits in six states - Ohio, New York, Maryland, Utah, Wisconsin and Oregon.

Two other defendants, Dole Fresh Vegetables, Inc. and Natural Selection Foods in San Juan Bautista, reported finding the deadly E. Coli O157:H7 strain in pigs and cattle feces on or around a plot farmed by Mission Organics and leased from Paicinas Ranch in San Benito County, Marler said.

“Genetics in this type of outbreak tend not to lie,” Marler said. “They found it hanging around the Mission Organics farmland….It’s pretty strong evidence from Dole and Natural Selection’s perspective.” (Read on …)