Friday, December 3, 2010

food safety and store fantasy

It's only after the second cup of coffee that my feet start to warm up. The snow is a light dusting that's falling at a decent rate and I am at my winter ritual of constantly checking craigslist while updating about all the things I did during the super busy season.

Also, I'm sifting through all the information I can find on the new food safety bill that just passed.
Ah, thank you Jon Tester for exempting farms that sell within a 275 mile radius that sell under $500,000 a year. Check and check. So we should be alright for next year. I panicked for awhile thinking - do I need to call my CSA a "rabbit food" co-op? And the meat share could be really high quality "cat food." I'm still thinking about how things are going to be different next year, but at least I won't have to worry about tons of paperwork and the FDA looking over my shoulder now. I like personal accountability better. These are my eggs, I collect them fresh (when the darn hens are laying!!!) and this is what I feed my cow, this is what I enrich my soil with, and here's a list of anything that I spray.

I love watching food safety issues come and go just to see how much focus is spent on it. The alar scare with apples in the '70s is amazing to read about: a spray that was designed to make harvesting easier by getting all the apples to ripen at the same time, causes cancer? Noooo, really? The mad cow disease footage was enough to make anyone stop eating beef, but I think it also opened people's eyes up to the fact that they don't know what their beef was being fed - which was the underlying more disgusting story to be told.
Now there's salmonella in the eggs and this outbreak keeps happening. Why? Because the massive factory farm that these egg layers are kept in don't know which hens are laying the bad eggs and they don't want to post a loss by getting rid of the bad hens.
I think everything is getting too big to fail now.

Right now the whole nation is sitting on top of a teetering tower of subsidized corn and a complex network of food haulers and producers where a beef cow can start in West Virginia, travels out to the southwest and then back to the east coast again before it lands on a plate. I certainly wouldn't want the job of tracking lettuce from California or Argentina through all the trade routes, processors, packagers, and grocery store chains.

But then again, I'm sitting here drinking coffee from South America and my dogs are cheaply fed, so I'll try not to throw stones. Just sitting here thinking about the way things are, I guess.

I've switched over to tea now and have made the necessary phone calls to get both my cows into the butcher on January 9th. I was hoping for earlier, but I just couldn't swing it. Now I've got to find something else for christmas presents and apologize the the meat share members for their empty freezers.


Now I'm looking to next year. What am I going to do...
Now is when I look back and see what went right and figure out how to adapt and make things better. There's always a slight twinge of reflection about this time now as well where I say- do I really want to keep doing this?
I got attacked by a 700 pound pig this year. I popped out a rib. I didn't go on vacation. I did many rounds of poultry killing. I sold out of everything and had to turn people away. I raised my own piglets for the first time. Hell, I watched my first lambs getting born last winter! And baby goats are ridiculously cute. And I mended fences, beefed up my garden soil, planted a cherry tree that didn't die yet, more plums, paw paws, blueberries, gooseberries and a new strawberry patch. I had an amazing plant sale and loved my CSA member's recipes and feedback and excitement at picking up their baskets. I got my first cow and learned that butcher dates fill up fast and I probably need to get a trailer now. I bought my first truck and consequently started getting a myriad of craigslist gems like cheap new hens, picked up hay and was able to get feed and goats without shoving it in the back of my honda. I grew carrots successfully this year! First time ever!!! I actually got a few carrots... of course they were in October, but still they were delicious!

So I guess there's the good and the bad. The ups and the down vary day to day, almost to the point of being bipolar. Things can go so right or so wrong, but I guess it's all a learning experience. I didn't grow up on a farm, but geez I love animals and still somehow am perfectly fine with eating them.

With the slowing down of winter, I'm sure these blogs will become more frequent as I've found that most of my problems are best worked through via writing, venting, reassessing, and therefore planning. Like right now, I'm playing out in my brain the possibility of opening up a little farm store. Yes, I know I just kinda said that I work too much as it is, but seriously, how cool would a little farm store be where you could buy local honey, organic grains, vegetable seeds, maple syrup, organic gardening sprays, and pickup for CSA under a roof, and have a freezer for the meat share people to pickup instead of the cooler system or waiting around for me to be home to pickup chickens. Just something small, maybe a strawbale building with skylights and a wood burner in the corner. Jason looked at my the same way he looked at me after I pitched the meat share idea to him - both happy and wary of how it is going to pan out. He wants to go on vacation, and rightfully so. Maybe this is just a winter fantasy, where when the snow is blowing I tend to forget how short on time I am in the growing season and I tend to over-order on seeds and have grandiose ideas about what can get done in a day.


Do I really want to keep doing this? The answer is more than likely yes. And well, if I'm already doing it, why not do more?

4 comments:

  1. the list of everything you accomplished this year is very impressive!! your thoughts on the food reminded me of that movie "food, inc". yes i eat processed foods too and the occasional big mac from mcdonalds (eek) but i'd say you and i are doing heck of a lot better than most people when it comes to food and being able to trace it's roots (our own family properties).

    gah back to that list. i had to think about what i accomplished this year and it wasnt very much! unless a baby counts. then i guess it was a lot.

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  2. congratulations on a great season janee! i am looking forward to high mill beef after the first of the year and really appreciate all of your hard work. keep on fighting the good fight!

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  3. Just remember you're not alone in this.... this country (if not the whole industrialized world) is going through a paradigm shift, and you are a big player in it! Thanks Janee don't give up!!

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  4. Thanks guys!

    And yes Christy, a baby is a big accomplishment. He's super cute. Lizette, I'm super excited for beef too! I can't wait!!!! And thanks Amanda, I think we're shifting in a good way. I'm excited to see how it all pans out.

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