I think you are drawing a conclusion that is your opinion. If Saudi’s wanted organic wheat they would ask for it thru G3
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Originally posted by TASFarms View PostI think you are drawing a conclusion that is your opinion. If Saudi’s wanted organic wheat they would ask for it thru G3
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Yeah....I wonder how much of this has to do with buying from the lowest cost producers and what seems to be a general realignment of business alliances and other "allies". The world is a changing.
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Originally posted by Robertbarlage View PostWheats up nice today keep on going!
....and then there's canloa, oops I mean canola.
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Those premium prices weren't enough to keep anyone who tried organic farming here in business!
From what I saw, typically reduced yields with some outright wrecks with little to no production. Lost production years using summerfallow to try and regain control of weeds(good luck with perennials). No production in plowdown years to build soil N. Long term perennial legumes in rotation with no grain production.....are you sure those grain prices are high enough in a ten year cycle?
I'll be watching the rich farmers from a neighboring community who are in the process of transitioning to organic. Their neighbors are complaining about thistle fuzz already. They also adopted much more "tillage" and have had their soil drifting...reports of soil in the ditches.
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In that link you just posted. They talk about poor prices for organic farms and have certifications canceled. Drift from a neighbor could cancel certification. Certified organic is s joke. It’s against anything synthetic. High seed rates to control weeds. Unless it’s a wet year crop would look good but wouldn’t yield.
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Guest
Good post, the real world. There's plenty of BTO failures as well but you usually don't try to emulate them now do you. So of course you wouldn't try to duplicate a failed attempt at transitioning to organic either. Plenty of organic growers that don't till or have runaway perennials. No one said it's without risk, it's still farming after all. Difference is you can produce something to be truly proud of that more and more consumers are demanding. It's indisputable that chemical residue in food coupled with low nutrient density has played a significant part in the overburdened health care systems. I'm sure the rich farmer down the road that is transitioning doesn't have dreadlocks.
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"Nutrient deficient" conventional crops? Must be the new organic sales pitch mantra.
Keep branding yourself as the superior alternative. Kinda like the placebo effect!
I sure hope you don't eat ANY highly processed foods or eat in any non-certified organic restaurants!
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I wonder how much smoking , excessive drinking, sedentary lifestyle, drug abuse, high risk lifestyle, violence, highly processed dietary food have all contributed to an over burdened health care system? Add to that a longer living population....
Enjoy your everyday chemical romance, you're surrounded even if you don't want to be. And I'm not referring to anything in the precedeing paragraph.
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Guest
The industry is booming yet it sounds like you're satisfied in the ghetto.
Booming
Organic
Industry
Leaves
Idol
Naysayers
Grasping
For
Rhetoric
Often
Good luck
https://www.reuters.com/article/us-health-lifeexpectancy/life-expectancy-declines-seen-in-u-s-and-other-high-income-countries-idUSKCN1L723RLast edited by Guest; Dec 1, 2018, 04:46.
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Guest
Originally posted by TASFarms View PostIn that link you just posted. They talk about poor prices for organic farms and have certifications canceled. Drift from a neighbor could cancel certification. Certified organic is s joke. It’s against anything synthetic. High seed rates to control weeds. Unless it’s a wet year crop would look good but wouldn’t yield.
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