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http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0922/p02s01-usec.html

Spinach growers tally losses

Some farmers suggest that the FDA's warning stemming from an E. coli outbreak is too broad.

By Daniel B. Wood | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor LOS ANGELES – As federal authorities continue to track the sources of E. coli bacteria on spinach that have led to 146 cases of illness in 23 states, economists say California growers will be hit hard - even those beyond the Salinas Valley producers implicated in initial findings.

Losses could total $50 million to $100 million, which includes destroying spinach already on the market, plowing under unharvested fields, and impacts on farmworkers, truckers, restaurants, and grocery stores. Growers from Colorado to Texas to Florida could also be affected, but California - which supplies 75 percent of the US market - will be hit the hardest.

At the same time, several factors are mitigating such losses. Spinach is a fast-growing crop - about 28 days from plant to harvest on average - so many farmers can plant something besides spinach. By contrast, many other crops, such as some fruit, take at least nine months to grow. Thus, the recovery from one lost spinach crop could take less time.

"If this had been a similar problem tied to cherries, many farmers would see the loss of income for an entire year," says Daniel Sumner, an agricultural economist at the University of California, Davis. "As hard as this is, they have more options than they might have with other crops."

On Wednesday, the Food and Drug Administration said that investigators were focusing on nine California farms spread over three counties. At the same time, FDA continued its advisory that consumers avoid all fresh spinach. One death has been attributed to the contamination.

While the investigations continue, some California farmers are balking at the FDA's advisory on fresh spinach. They say the ban is too broadly stated and could cause unnecessary economic loss.

"They are suggesting that the problem with E. coli is in the spinach itself and not the conditions under which it was grown, the location, or the processing," says Linda Halley, a spinach farmer from Wisconsin who moved to California six months ago. Now general manager of a 12.5-acre organic produce farm in Santa Barbara, Ms. Halley says the FDA advisory is "ridiculous" and "doesn't make sense."

The reasoning of Halley and other farmers is twofold. First, organic farms have much stricter regulations from field to market than do conventional farms. Those include a ban on the use of animal manure, which is a source of E. coli bacteria, either directly or from runoff into water that is then sprayed on crops. Second, many smaller farms sell their produce directly to consumers - instead of to large packaging firms that consolidate spinach from dozens of farms. Therefore, they say their product should not be covered by the same blanket restriction advisory as nonorganic farmers.

"We are using the same methods of planting and harvesting that we did two weeks ago before this happened, and our spinach is just as safe as it was then," says Halley.

Because her operation is small, Halley says economic impact will be negligible, but others are already sustaining huge losses.

Jack Vessey, an Imperial County produce farmer, says his entire business is in limbo until the FDA pins down the details of what happened. Besides throwing off his season-to-season schedule of planting crops, the outbreak has cost him at least $250,000 already, he calculates.

If the problem persists, Mr. Vessey says he has the option of planting something else. "But the crops I replace it with will not be as lucrative," he says.

Doc Shillington727-447-5282Doc

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http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0918/p02s01-usgn.html And I suppose the outcome of this is that the FDA will approve spraying our farm produce with even more virii just like the meats !!!! I think I'm gonna move to MARS

 

Thursday, September 21, 2006, 2:52:56 PM, you wrote:

 

 

 

 

>

 

 

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0922/p02s01-usec.html

Spinach growers tally losses

Some farmers suggest that the FDA's warning stemming from an E. coli outbreak is too broad.

By Daniel B. Wood | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

LOS ANGELES – As federal authorities continue to track the sources of E. coli bacteria on spinach that have led to 146 cases of illness in 23 states, economists say California growers will be hit hard - even those beyond the Salinas Valley producers implicated in initial findings.

Losses could total $50 million to $100 million, which includes destroying spinach already on the market, plowing under unharvested fields, and impacts on farmworkers, truckers, restaurants, and grocery stores. Growers from Colorado to Texas to Florida could also be affected, but California - which supplies 75 percent of the US market - will be hit the hardest.

At the same time, several factors are mitigating such losses. Spinach is a fast-growing crop - about 28 days from plant to harvest on average - so many farmers can plant something besides spinach. By contrast, many other crops, such as some fruit, take at least nine months to grow. Thus, the recovery from one lost spinach crop could take less time.

"If this had been a similar problem tied to cherries, many farmers would see the loss of income for an entire year," says Daniel Sumner, an agricultural economist at the University of California, Davis. "As hard as this is, they have more options than they might have with other crops."

On Wednesday, the Food and Drug Administration said that investigators were focusing on nine California farms spread over three counties. At the same time, FDA continued its advisory that consumers avoid all fresh spinach. One death has been attributed to the contamination.

While the investigations continue, some California farmers are balking at the FDA's advisory on fresh spinach. They say the ban is too broadly stated and could cause unnecessary economic loss.

"They are suggesting that the problem with E. coli is in the spinach itself and not the conditions under which it was grown, the location, or the processing," says Linda Halley, a spinach farmer from Wisconsin who moved to California six months ago. Now general manager of a 12.5-acre organic produce farm in Santa Barbara, Ms. Halley says the FDA advisory is "ridiculous" and "doesn't make sense."

The reasoning of Halley and other farmers is twofold. First, organic farms have much stricter regulations from field to market than do conventional farms. Those include a ban on the use of animal manure, which is a source of E. coli bacteria, either directly or from runoff into water that is then sprayed on crops. Second, many smaller farms sell their produce directly to consumers - instead of to large packaging firms that consolidate spinach from dozens of farms. Therefore, they say their product should not be covered by the same blanket restriction advisory as nonorganic farmers.

"We are using the same methods of planting and harvesting that we did two weeks ago before this happened, and our spinach is just as safe as it was then," says Halley.

Because her operation is small, Halley says economic impact will be negligible, but others are already sustaining huge losses.

Jack Vessey, an Imperial County produce farmer, says his entire business is in limbo until the FDA pins down the details of what happened. Besides throwing off his season-to-season schedule of planting crops, the outbreak has cost him at least $250,000 already, he calculates.

If the problem persists, Mr. Vessey says he has the option of planting something else. "But the crops I replace it with will not be as lucrative," he says.

Doc Shillington

727-447-5282

Doc

 

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Nope! Just raise yer own critters.

Love,

Doc

PS. Mars is not that climatable and herbs don't grow so well there. LOL

 

Doc Shillington727-447-5282Doc

 

-

zoe w

Dr. Ian Shillington

Friday, September 22, 2006 2:55 PM

Re: Herbal Remedies - Spinach

 

 

 

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0918/p02s01-usgn.html And I suppose the outcome of this is that the FDA will approve spraying our farm produce with even more virii just like the meats !!!! I think I'm gonna move to MARS

 

Thursday, September 21, 2006, 2:52:56 PM, you wrote:

 

 

 

 

 

 

>

 

http://www.csmonitor.com/2006/0922/p02s01-usec.html

Spinach growers tally losses

Some farmers suggest that the FDA's warning stemming from an E. coli outbreak is too broad.

By Daniel B. Wood | Staff writer of The Christian Science Monitor

LOS ANGELES – As federal authorities continue to track the sources of E. coli bacteria on spinach that have led to 146 cases of illness in 23 states, economists say California growers will be hit hard - even those beyond the Salinas Valley producers implicated in initial findings.

Losses could total $50 million to $100 million, which includes destroying spinach already on the market, plowing under unharvested fields, and impacts on farmworkers, truckers, restaurants, and grocery stores. Growers from Colorado to Texas to Florida could also be affected, but California - which supplies 75 percent of the US market - will be hit the hardest.

At the same time, several factors are mitigating such losses. Spinach is a fast-growing crop - about 28 days from plant to harvest on average - so many farmers can plant something besides spinach. By contrast, many other crops, such as some fruit, take at least nine months to grow. Thus, the recovery from one lost spinach crop could take less time.

"If this had been a similar problem tied to cherries, many farmers would see the loss of income for an entire year," says Daniel Sumner, an agricultural economist at the University of California, Davis. "As hard as this is, they have more options than they might have with other crops."

On Wednesday, the Food and Drug Administration said that investigators were focusing on nine California farms spread over three counties. At the same time, FDA continued its advisory that consumers avoid all fresh spinach. One death has been attributed to the contamination.

While the investigations continue, some California farmers are balking at the FDA's advisory on fresh spinach. They say the ban is too broadly stated and could cause unnecessary economic loss.

"They are suggesting that the problem with E. coli is in the spinach itself and not the conditions under which it was grown, the location, or the processing," says Linda Halley, a spinach farmer from Wisconsin who moved to California six months ago. Now general manager of a 12.5-acre organic produce farm in Santa Barbara, Ms. Halley says the FDA advisory is "ridiculous" and "doesn't make sense."

The reasoning of Halley and other farmers is twofold. First, organic farms have much stricter regulations from field to market than do conventional farms. Those include a ban on the use of animal manure, which is a source of E. coli bacteria, either directly or from runoff into water that is then sprayed on crops. Second, many smaller farms sell their produce directly to consumers - instead of to large packaging firms that consolidate spinach from dozens of farms. Therefore, they say their product should not be covered by the same blanket restriction advisory as nonorganic farmers.

"We are using the same methods of planting and harvesting that we did two weeks ago before this happened, and our spinach is just as safe as it was then," says Halley.

Because her operation is small, Halley says economic impact will be negligible, but others are already sustaining huge losses.

Jack Vessey, an Imperial County produce farmer, says his entire business is in limbo until the FDA pins down the details of what happened. Besides throwing off his season-to-season schedule of planting crops, the outbreak has cost him at least $250,000 already, he calculates.

If the problem persists, Mr. Vessey says he has the option of planting something else. "But the crops I replace it with will not be as lucrative," he says.

Doc Shillington

727-447-5282

Doc (AT) AcademyOfNaturalHealing (DOT) com

 

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Well, if NAIS goes thru NO ONE will be

able to raise their own critters without tracking devices and movement accountability

and subject to illegal search and seizure or depopulation. Not one chicken, not

one dairy goat, not one parrot or lovebird, not one lamb, not one hog, etc. All

will be tracked by USDA.

 

Folks, this is a very scary nightmare we

are about to be sucked into unless it is stopped!! I hate to keep harping on

it, but this is real. As real as the Patriot Act, REAL ID and PAWS.

 

Big Pharma, Big Ag and our political

crooks are stomping out our 4th and 5th Amendment rights

of property and privacy. Please think of this world our children and

grandchildren will have to live in.

 

And to keep this on topic, I have found a

great way to use the TN formula with our fall harvest of apples and grapes. TN swirled

with fresh grape juice and TN in hot apple pie. Oh yea, yummy!! Raw apple juice

and applesauce is next!

 

Kathy

 

 

http://www.LegacyManorFarm.com

" The

way food used to taste "

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

herbal remedies [herbal remedies ] On Behalf Of Dr. Ian Shillington

Sunday, September 24, 2006

4:00 PM

To:

herbal remedies

Re: Herbal Remedies -

Spinach

 

 

 

 

 

 

Nope!

Just raise yer own critters.

 

 

Love,

 

 

Doc

 

 

PS.

Mars is not that climatable and herbs don't grow so well there. LOL

 

 

 

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Ain't that the truth!!!!!!!!!

Perhaps you can give the list more data and some links on this Kathy.

This would be very valuable to us all.

Love,

Doc

 

Doc Shillington727-447-5282Doc

 

-

LegacyManor

herbal remedies

Sunday, September 24, 2006 4:32 PM

RE: Herbal Remedies - Spinach

 

 

 

 

Well, if NAIS goes thru NO ONE will be able to raise their own critters without tracking devices and movement accountability and subject to illegal search and seizure or depopulation. Not one chicken, not one dairy goat, not one parrot or lovebird, not one lamb, not one hog, etc. All will be tracked by USDA.

Folks, this is a very scary nightmare we are about to be sucked into unless it is stopped!! I hate to keep harping on it, but this is real. As real as the Patriot Act, REAL ID and PAWS.

Big Pharma, Big Ag and our political crooks are stomping out our 4th and 5th Amendment rights of property and privacy. Please think of this world our children and grandchildren will have to live in.

And to keep this on topic, I have found a great way to use the TN formula with our fall harvest of apples and grapes. TN swirled with fresh grape juice and TN in hot apple pie. Oh yea, yummy!! Raw apple juice and applesauce is next!

Kathy

http://www.LegacyManorFarm.com

 

"The way food used to taste"

 

 

 

 

 

 

herbal remedies [herbal remedies ] On Behalf Of Dr. Ian ShillingtonSunday, September 24, 2006 4:00 PMherbal remedies Subject: Re: Herbal Remedies - Spinach

 

 

 

 

 

Nope! Just raise yer own critters.

 

Love,

 

Doc

 

PS. Mars is not that climatable and herbs don't grow so well there. LOL

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There are quite a few websites dedicated

to informing the public about NAIS. Most ppl have never heard of NAIS or PAWS

or even REAL ID. The gov’t wants all cats, dogs, livestock, and people to

be identified in some permanent form. Tattoo’s, RFID’s, tags.

 

www.nonais.org

www.libertyark.org

www.stopanimalid.org

www.grannywarriors.com

 

The first 2 sites are very, very

comprehensive. Lots of info and it is all backed up with facts. Search for your

state list against NAIS and join it. Sign up for alerts. Small

agriculture needs all citizens to be aware of NAIS. Pet owners need to be aware

of the PAWS legislation.

 

The Granny Warriors are touring the

country going to fairs and other ag events publicizing the facts about NAIS.

They are doing a great job too!!

 

Do you know they are planning on putting

RFID devices on all license plates in Texas

that can be scanned from a distance??

 

Kathy

 

 

 

http://www.LegacyManorFarm.com

" The

way food used to taste "

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

herbal remedies [herbal remedies ] On Behalf Of Dr. Ian Shillington

Monday, September 25, 2006

2:31 PM

herbal remedies

Re: Herbal Remedies -

Spinach

 

 

 

 

 

 

Ain't

that the truth!!!!!!!!!

 

 

Perhaps

you can give the list more data and some links on this Kathy.

 

 

This

would be very valuable to us all.

 

 

Love,

 

 

Doc

 

 

 

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