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| General chitchat Got something non-GYO related to get off your chest? Feel free to talk about anything you like! (Keep it clean) |
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| The Soil Association is looking at withdrawing organic status from crops that are airfreighted into the country. A laudable idea you may say but in reallity this has confused me somewhat. Organic to me means foods not having chemicals added for whatever reason from sowing to eating. Green means being sustainable with as low as possible or carbon neutral footprint. What does being Green have to do with being organic????? Yes its something to aim for but what about other means of transport for longer shelf life goods, for example organic lentils shipped in from India., They may be organic but certainly not Green in nature but they escape the Soil Associations wrath. Why? Do you shop green or organic and more importantly do you grow greener or more organically? I go Green in both respects UNLESS something is produced locally and then organic comes to the fore, I buy English normal apples rather than Australian organic ones for example as its much more sustainable and the apples are provided "in season Green is good and sustainable, non green organic is good but unsustainable. Choices choices.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs |
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| Quite right, PW - I think that the SA is dropping a clanger with this one if that's what they plan. I think that they would be better off keeping the organic status (which is - as you say - all about how the veg is GROWN) BUT insist on a BIGGER LABEL with the country of origin so that it's easier for us busy consumers to see where we are buying from
__________________ Hazel www.hazelandjanesallotment.blogspot.com update Tues 02/12/2008......End of year report!..... |
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| I think I am like you PW. I try to be green all the time and organic when I can. Transportation has always concerned me. I stopped buying organic veg boxes because the local farm shop who supplied them included produce that had travelled miles to get in the box. Supporting the local economy is in my opinion better than shipping organic stuff into the supermarket, and hopefully will help keep local costs down.
__________________ Digger-07 ![]() "If you think you can, or think you can't, you're right" Henry Ford. |
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| Hmmmm. Good question! This has to come to the forefront of my mind recently with french beans, which i love. We ran out of our own frozen ones ages ago, and I was buying organic ones frm the supermarket, until I realised they were being shipped from Israel... So now I'm eating Bird's Eye frozen ones, (which probably aren't in the least bit organic, but fresher than ones flown across the world) or doing without. 'Organic' is definately not always 'green'!
__________________ Sarah “Tell me one last thing,” said Harry. “Is this real? Or has this been happening inside my head?” “Of course it is happening inside your head, Harry, but why on earth should that mean that it is not real?” |
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| For me organic is about how our food is produced, not where. I would prefer organic, local and in season but the supermarkets don't make it easy for farmers do they! I buy organic rather than local - why should local necessarily be good for the environment? I do recognize the inconsistency of air-freighted food though. However for all I know the 'local' farmer has used pesticides and herbicides and artificial fertilizers. Left no margin around fields for wildlife and grows no hedges - so whats so great about that local farmer????
__________________ Manda. "Wouldn't it be nice For maybe an hour To not have a care." |
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| For all you know SBP that may well be the case in countries that produce organic food. In Egypt the beans that are organically grown just outside our hotel for a well known supermarked chain were planted on what was once desert and are watered with the effluent run off from the hotels. Oh it was treated and clean (tested weekly) but somewhat coloured my view of organic systems in far flung places. One small question SBP, when the oil runs out and your lovely carbon producing but organic veg no longer arrives from Argentina, Kenya or what ever country it was flown in from, how do you explain to your children that your insistance of eating organic but unsustainably produced food helped to make the planet unsuitable for millions of people to live in as its flooded or too hot or that steam trains are back on the rails as all of the fuel has gone supplying people like you organic carrots from far far away when you turned your nose up at ones produced next door because the field didnt have a wildlife margin. Oh and yes you do make a difference.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs Last edited by pigletwillie; 28-05-2007 at 02:25 PM. |
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| Good topic Piglet. It's just another example of wooly thinking. The onr yhing has nothing to do with the other. I try not to buy things which are out of season and flown half way round the world. If it can't be produced here I reckon I don't need it. I guess that makes me more green than organic. And I certainly wouldn't buy something that had been transported round the world because it said organic on it. I don't even trust their labelling to that extent. Just does what organic mean on that label. It might not mean what you think it means,
__________________ From each according to his ability, to each according to his needs. |
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| I do make a difference thanks PW. How about how some inorganic fertilizers are produced - some are a by-product from the petro-chemical industry....its not as straightforward as you would like to suggest. I'm not suggesting I have to buy organic produce flown in, but if you think that despoiling our own environment is acceptable because the produce that is grown is local, you're wrong - and that is what the organic movement was originally about.
__________________ Manda. "Wouldn't it be nice For maybe an hour To not have a care." |
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Sri lanka produces wondefull organic pineapples, but at the expense of prime rainforest and its the same the world over. Feeding us organic food but at devestating consequences to their flora and fauna. Whole eco systems are vanishing, but thats ok because its not in Wiltshire.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs Last edited by pigletwillie; 28-05-2007 at 03:14 PM. |
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| Guess what these countries also produce non-organic cash crops - which is better non-organic factory farmed produce brought in from abroad to satisfy the British consumer or organic produce that is better or less bad for the foreign environment. Do you naively believe Sri Lanka will stop producing pineapples or Brazil cattle just because we stop buying the organic version?
__________________ Manda. "Wouldn't it be nice For maybe an hour To not have a care." |
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| SBP, I appologise if it came across that way, it isnt at all aimed at you. My original point was that why are the soil association getting involved in politics and clouding organics with green issues. Organic is organic and I cant see how they can remove their stamp if its airlifted in but stuff that comes in on a boat isnt. You are a consumer of organic foods but this will mean that some foods you may have bought now wont as they in theory at any rate wont be organic (but they are). I am also interested in seeing how people relate organic produce to greenness, as I personally cannot see how organic food flow in is green, but then as you rightly say neither is loading crops with lots of sprays. Your point about countries not stoping importing food in if we stoped buying organic, yes they would to a large extent as the organic price premium would be gone. Finally my being a moderator in no way prevents me from entering into debates. I merely reponded to your replies.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs |
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| I'm not convinced of your arguement at all. Plenty of out of season food, grown abroad (or meat or fish for that matter) is on sale in all supermarkets. They might not get an organic premium but they obviously squeeze farmers enough to make a profit. Otherwise why would Fairtrade exist?
__________________ Manda. "Wouldn't it be nice For maybe an hour To not have a care." |
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| Fairtrade is sold at a fiscal and ethical premium and as you state, most of the other crops are out of season. But then getting back to the original point, what has green got to do with a product being labelled organic and why the difference between whats brought in via plane and that via a boat?
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs |
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| You need to think about what the Soil Association stands for. Its much more than whether or not your carrots are organic. They bring fair trade into it aswell. Though as you point out fairtrade isnt that much better. I do believe that the soil Association has alot to do with the politics of food and green issues. To be organic is in a sense to be green also,wether thats why you buy/grow it that way or not. The soil association is right to consider removing their label from air freighted food. Yes it is still organic,therefore it will still be able to bear an organic logo. It just wont be the S.A's. |
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| I know vaguely what the requirements are for vegetables and fruit that are labelled 'Organic' in the UK and I can equate to this! I don't know what the requirements are for foreign organic produce or that it is policed correctly? I tend to Buy British when I can but there aint many Orange or Banana plantations in the UK! First I look at country of origin then I look at organic status. Does this make me green but not organic?
__________________ My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE) |
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| I suppose it would depend on how your oranges and bananas got into this country. And where you buy things from. Lets face it, if you buy from Tescos Your NOT green, even if your clubcard says you are. But if you go to your local organic/fairtrade shop you probably are green. But once again in my view green and organic go hand in hand anyway wether you want them to or not. How can you be "green" but be happy to buy air freighted organic food or local pesticide ridden food? And if you class yourself as "organic" if its for health reasons your still helping the environment(if buying food not air freighted). And if you buy organic because you want to support environmental welfare you are definately being green. Therefore organic and green go hand in hand. Either you embrace them together or you're quite possibly being a hypocrite (not aimed at you Snadger,its aimed at no one,just a generalisation). |
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__________________ My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE) |
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| Just found this PW .Got yourself a real can of worms here .Some people will say nothing at all - organic is organic and green is green. I would argue that organic and green are tied to each other and one effects the other.Why eat organic food that has been grown without chemicals but has to be flown round the world using petrochemicals poluting the air ? To me this kind of person is just using the organic label as a fashion statement. I suggested in another thread that organic food that used nuclear fuel wasn't really organic to which I think you (PW) replied that at least it didn't produce carbon emissions.Fair enough but what about the toxic waste? I guess what Im trying to say is that the complete process from seed to plate should be as completly friendly to the world as posssible.Its easy to pick out the parts that suit your choices but sometimes you have to dig a little deeper and examine what else is affecting the choices you make and how they sit with each other.
__________________ Et tū, quis es? |
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| I concur Beefy, they should be linked but but why only remove their approval from airfreight and not to stuff delivered by boat.
__________________ Kindest regards, David. http://pigletsplots.blogspot.com/ updated - Sunday 19th at 2100hrs |
















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