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vitamin B12, was oil?

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It was not aimed at anyone - just what someone I know says. To

me 'laziness' is not an insult anyway - being lazy can be good :-)

 

Jo

 

, peter VV <swpgh01 wrote:

>

> Maybe you do, as long as you are not aiming that at anyone on here?

> I still maintain that it is not always necessary to wash anything

grown above ground, unless they have visible contamination if you

have grown it yourself.

>

> The Valley Vegan...............

>

> heartwerk <jo.heartwork wrote:

> All that you have said still leads me to believe that you

would be

> better off washing everything. May I ask why you don't wash? I know

> someone who admits it is just pure laziness.

>

> Jo

>

> , yarrow@ wrote:

> >

> > [big smiley face]

> >

> > I really don't worry about anything I might pick up in my veganic

> > garden. Certainly not E. coli (no cows, no cow manure)! We did

have

> a

> > cat who patrolled for roof rats, but I never found cat poop

> anywhere.

> >

> > Insects? They're everywhere, and if I wanted to worry about

insect

> > poop or footprints, I'd be more concerned about produce from the

> > store, or even from the farmers' market, since those insects have

> > probably picked up minute quantities of human pathogens from all

> the

> > handling etc. (not to mention actual human hands, crawling with

> > pathogens, that have handled it at various stages of picking,

> > packing, setting out for sale, shopping).

> >

> > And that's just for the organically grown produce. The majority

of

> > pesticides cannot even be washed off, if you're not buying

strictly

> > organic.

> >

> > As for dog poop, well, as with anyone else who has a dog, I

handle

> it

> > several times a day anyway (albeit separated from my hands with a

> > couple layers of plastic or a 4-ft. pole), and of course I

breathe

> it

> > in several times a day. (You do know that if you can smell a

> > substance, you're actually breathing in particles of it?) The dog

> > poop isn't anywhere near my garden, though.

> >

> > Planes dumping their fuel? That means it's already in the air and

> > water. So by washing it, there's an infinitesimal chance you

might

> > even be adding to the toxic load.

> >

> > Bird poop? I've been pooped on by birds, and I survived. I can

see

> > any bird poop on my tomatoes, since I live in a climate where it

> does

> > not rain in the summer, so I either compost the tomato (if it's a

> > cherry tomato) or else rinse it off.

> >

> > Anyway, this is all to say that I don't worry about any of this,

> and

> > anything from my garden has a much much lower yuck factor than

> > anything I might buy. In the big picture, what is worth paying

> > attention to is the basic stuff, such as hand washing after going

> to

> > the bathroom, staying away from the most-toxic produce (the

> > Environmental Working Group has published lists of which have the

> > most and least pesticide residues, and last Feb. Consumer Reports

> > used this data to recommend what's worth buying organic),

favoring

> > organically grown as much as possible (some studies have shown OG

> > produce is more nutritious and tastes better), and, of course,

> eating

> > lots of fruits and vegetables.

> >

> >

> > jo wrote,

> > I certainly hope so. When you think of birds flying over and

> > pooping, and planes dumping their fuel and insects crawling over

> the

> > dog poo and then onto the fruit and veg - may I just repeat 'yuk'.

> >

> > Jo

> >

> > -

> > <swpgh01@>peter VV

> > I think he was joking?

> > to a certain extent.

> >

> > jo <<jo.heartwork@>jo.heartwork@> wrote:

> > Double yuk!!!

> >

> > -

> > " *mona " <<ahnochirah@>ahnochirah@>

> > > That's what I was thinking !! LOL ...

> > >

> > > fraggle <EBbrewpunx@> wrote:

> > > > you mean you expect me to take every veggie from my garden

> > > inside and wash it before i eat it???!

> > > > that would just cut waaaaaaay down on my grazing....

> > > > and foraging

> > > >

> > > >

> > > > >jo <jo.heartwork@>

> > > > >I think you can get enough B12 from the dirt on unwashed

> > > vegetables - but you can also get other things from them - like

> > > > >e-coli, worms eggs etc. If you have birds, cats or wild

> animals

> > > > >in the vicinity they will have pooped on your vegetables

> > > > >sometime recently. I wouldn't relish eating any veg unwashed.

> >

Peter H

>

>

>

>

> New Mail is the ultimate force in competitive emailing.

Find out more at the Mail Championships. Plus: play games and

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>

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