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I covered that one...
I covered that one...
No two people see to entirely agree as to what 'organic' means. Some folks seem to think anything that is powdered and comes in a package from a feed store is 'not organic', anything that comes from a health food store is 'organic'.
That was the whole point of the USDA National Organic Program, to set minimum standards for organic production, so that the consumer had some sort of idea what they were getting. Before the national standard was implemented, it was standards set up by various states or interest groups or the word of the person you were buying from.
That was the whole point of the USDA National Organic Program, to set minimum standards for organic production, so that the consumer had some sort of idea what they were getting. Before the national standard was implemented, it was standards set up by various states or interest groups or the word of the person you were buying from.
One lady told me if I fed my chicks medicated feed to prevent salmonella(something the vet recommended), that meant they weren't 'organic' and she wouldn't buy my eggs, for example, as giving any medication is 'not organic'. Another told me she would not buy my eggs because my chickens had been vaccinated at birth against a serious disease, something the vet also strongly recommended.
The only thing medicated starter feed contains is Amprolium. It is an antimicrobial agent that help to fend off coccidiosis. It does not guard against salmonella or anything else. It IS NOT allowed under the organic standards. Vaccines are not medications, as they are live biologicals (read that as all natural), they are allowed in organic production.
The only thing medicated starter feed contains is Amprolium. It is an antimicrobial agent that help to fend off coccidiosis. It does not guard against salmonella or anything else. It IS NOT allowed under the organic standards. Vaccines are not medications, as they are live biologicals (read that as all natural), they are allowed in organic production.
For some people, it also means management practices like animals spending all or most time pastured, not feeding certain grains(even if organic), not feeding urea, tankage, not feeding any animal products, or any byproducts of the food industry. Everyone has a somewhat different idea of exactly what 'organic' means, what they exclude or include as 'organic'.
Once again that is the whole point of the USDA National Organic Program. To get everybody on the same page, and avoid confusing the consumer.
Once again that is the whole point of the USDA National Organic Program. To get everybody on the same page, and avoid confusing the consumer.
Most people around here who sell eggs, don't even seem to TRY for the 'certified organic' label/certification unless (ironically) they have a fairly big commercial operation going. They can get that designation while doing a lot of things that most people wouldn't associate with the word 'organic'.
Why would they? If they are small enough to know all of their customers, their customers can decide. Most of my eggs are sold in grocery stores. The consumer doesn't get a chance to meet me or see my operation, but the USDA Certified Organic label tells them that somebody has come and looked at my operation and saw that it met the national standards, vs. some arbitrary "organic" labeling that could mean one thing or another.
Why would they? If they are small enough to know all of their customers, their customers can decide. Most of my eggs are sold in grocery stores. The consumer doesn't get a chance to meet me or see my operation, but the USDA Certified Organic label tells them that somebody has come and looked at my operation and saw that it met the national standards, vs. some arbitrary "organic" labeling that could mean one thing or another.
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