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May Farm Tour Photos / Farm Work Day Info |
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Organic? - Thaddeus |
For thirty years my family has been farming the same land in a manner different from conventional farming methods. In the beginning there was not a term that represented our style of agriculture. Growing crops in a manner that eliminated the need for chemicals while maximizing sustainable use of the land was not normal. Selecting varieties based on their taste and culinary traits opposed to their yield and shelf life was unheard of.
My parent’s generation toiled at getting the public to realize the value of this alternative way of producing food. This movement encompassed much more than simply not using chemicals. It reduced the intensive use of land, promoted natural biodiversity and reduced soil erosion. It put workers in an environment in which worked with the owners of a farm. It created a marketing network that connected small farms directly to consumers. While all of these changes were taking place one word was used to represent this movement – organic.
Today that detail of not using chemicals in the long process of farming is the only thing that the term organic represents. The certification that defines organic does not verify or even encourage a complete sustainable farming system. It means nothing of the size, farming procedures, management goals and marketing techniques of a farm. When the organic movement began these details were more important than limiting the amendments a farmer used when cultivating crops.
While my family and many other families still farm in a method consistent with the original movement, we are put in the same category as factory farms that have slightly altered their conventional farming process to meet the legal definition of organic. These farms can be huge corporations who’s management practice of the land is to harvest three to four different crops on the same piece of land in one year – maximizing revenue from that land for the year’s profit. In contrast, our farm’s practice is to grown one crop to harvest per year and leave the same land fallow for a season or to grow a cover crop that is incorporated back into the ground before next year’s crop – maximizing the sustainable use of the land for the next generation.
Today the organic certification our farm completes every year does not do our superior farming practices justice. It is a one-dimension standard that extends no further than the list of materials that have been used in our fields. The challenge of my generation is to make consumers realize that the farming method is what is important and to build a produce distribution system that allows consumers to support individual farms and that farm’s practices. Unfortunately today the word organic has shifted to a marketing term that loosely enforces a set of amendments that are considered “organic” in order to earn a premium price for a farm’s product.
Purchasing your product directly from our farm is the best thing you can do to support our way of agriculture.
Thaddeus
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Farm Tour Update
Get ready! We'll be hosting a work party on the farm in the fall. We
hope to see new faces along with familiar folks getting their hands
mucky in Capay dirt. Stay tuned...
Please contact: Georgette at Georgette@farmfreshtoyou.com or call 800.796.6009 to
reserve space for you, family and friends.
Plan on
arriving at the farm early in the morning, as close to 8am
as possible. There will be actvities and walks planned for the whole family.
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| Farm News |
April 16, 2008
Spring Heat |
April 9, 2008
Farming Weeds |
April 2, 2008
The Canal Season |
March 26, 2008
Spring Overload |
March 19, 2008
The Spring Rush |
March 12, 2008
The Frog Hole |
March 5, 2008
Light Brown Apple Moth |
February 27, 2008
Herb Garden |
February 20, 2008
Cental Valley Agriculture |
February 13, 2008
Greenhouse Time |
February 6, 2008
The Science of Farming |
January 30, 2008
Generation Two |
January 23, 2008
Paper Whites in January |
January 16, 2008
Winter Pruning |
January 9, 2008
The Storm of the Winter |
January 2, 2008
The Farming Year |
December 19, 2007
Auction Season |
December 12, 2007
Winter Winds |
December 2, 2007
Herb Garden in the Making |
November 28, 2007
Fall Colors |
November 27, 2007
Thanks for the Soil |
November 14, 2007
Green Festival |
November 7, 2007
Fish Pile |
October 31, 2007
Fall Changes |
October 22, 2007
Married in France |
September 26, 2007
The Perfect Tomato |
September 19, 2007
Fall Is Falling |
September 3, 2007
The Blue Wasp |
August 29 , 2007
The Chard Challenge |
August 22 , 2007
Fall Planting |
August 15 , 2007
Ideas for Fall and Winter Crops |
August 8 , 2007
A Lesson in Transplants |
August 1 , 2007
Mini Quail |
July 25, 2007
Middle of Summer |
July 4, 2007
Jersey Girl vs. Mr. Rattlesnake |
June 27,2007
Already Thinking of Fall-Thaddeus |
June 20, 2007
A Week of Benchmarks -Thaddeus |
Jun 6, 2007
Goslings in the Creek -Thaddeus |
May 30, 2007
Tomatoes -Thaddeus |
May 23, 2007
Summer Smells -Thaddeus |
May 9, 2007
Muddy in May -Thaddeus |
May 2, 2007
What a Busy Week-Thaddeus |
April 11, 2007
An Early Start - Freeman |
April 4, 2007
Gopher Food - Thaddeus |
March 28, 2007
Spring Silence - Thaddeus |
March 21,2007
Spring Buds and Worm Food - Thaddeus |
March 12, 2007
Spring Gobbles - Thaddeus |
March 7, 2007
Spring Time - Thaddeus |
February 26, 2007
Summer Food Please - Thaddeus |
February 19, 2007
Peach Blossoms and Arundo Burning - Thaddeus
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February 12, 2007
Chris Leaves - Thaddeus |
January 31, 2007
Heart Attack- Thaddeus |
January 24, 2007
Turkeys Can Fly- Thaddeus |
January 10, 2007
Live the Seasons- Freeman |
January 1, 2007
Happy New Year Thaddeus |
Nov 29, 2006
Organic? - Thaddeus
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Nov 15, 2006
Winter Preparation - Thaddeus |
Nov 1, 2006
Canal Dries Up - Thaddeus |
Oct 25, 2006
Beets - Thaddeus |
Oct 18,2006
New Database - Thaddeus |
Oct 11,2006
Rain, Sweet Rain - Thaddeus |
Oct 4, 2006
Organic Fertilizers- Thaddeus |
Sept 27, 2006
Windy Days - Thaddeus |
Sept 20, 2006
Clean Produce - Thaddeus |
Sept. 13, 2006
Cools Coming - Thaddeus |
Sept 6 , 2006
War of the Worms - Thaddeus |
Aug 30, 2006
Fall Falling - Thaddeus |
Aug 23, 2006
Farm Tour - Thaddeus |
Aug 16 , 2006
Hopping Roadblock - Thaddeus |
Aug 9 , 2006
Tomato Storys - Thaddeus |
Aug 2 , 2006
Slow Food- Thaddeus |
July 26, 2006
Blah Blah- Thaddeus |
July 19, 2006
Golden Hills - Thaddeus |
July 12, 2006
Heirlooms and Heat - Thaddeus |
July 5, 2006
Algorithms - Thaddeus |
June 28, 2006
It's Getting Hot Out Here - Thaddeus |
June 21, 2006
Cherry Tomatoes - Thaddeus |
June 14, 2006
Bear and Deer Meet- Thaddeus |
June 7, 2006
Poults in the Green Beans- Thaddeus |
May 31, 2006
A Wedding in the Garden - Thaddeus |
May 24, 2006
The Wedding Brigade - Thaddeus |
May 17, 2006
Irrigate!!! - Thaddeus |
May 10, 2006
Trading Weather for Carrots - Thaddeus |
May 3, 2006
Honoring Immigrants - Thaddeus |
April 26, 2006
Radishes with Aioli - Thaddeus |
April 19, 2006
Can we cultivate yet?! - Noah |
April 5, 2006
Migratory Birds and this Crazy Rain - Thaddeus |
March 29, 2006
Getting Tractors in the Field, Ready or Not - Thaddeus |
March 15, 2006
Warm in the Greenhouse, Frost Outside - Thaddeus |
March 8, 2006
Bear Learns to Chase Rabbits - Thaddeus |
March 1, 2006
Dependent on the Weather - Thaddeus |
February 22, 2006
Almond Festival - Thaddeus |
February 15, 2006
Feels Like Summer, Sort Of - Thaddeus |
February 8, 2006
Spring & SuperBowl Sunday - Thaddeus |
February 1, 2006
Back from Asilomar - Thaddeus |
January 25, 2006
Wind & More Wind - Thaddeus |
January 18, 2006
Figs in the Greenhouse - Moyra |
January 11, 2006
Toms & Jakes - Thaddeus |
January 4, 2006
Rain, Roadblocks & Mud - Thaddeus |
December 12, 2005
Wrapping Things Up For Winter - Thaddeus |
December 5, 2005
Au Revoir, Automnal - Noah |
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| All Past Farm News for 2005 |
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