Unbelievable!
I guess the reason chemical farming folks assume I’m one of them is that I used to be. When I quietly switched sides in 2005 I never bothered to send them notice. I didn’t intentionally go undercover but it does seem they haven’t caught on. At least I can’t figure any other explanation for the document Dow Chemical blithely addressed to me a few months ago.
The spin was well done. And it actually took me in. At least until the third sentence of the first page. When the featured ’steward' of more than 4,000 acres of grass land said, “If I don’t spray, this place would be covered in weeds.”
It was then I knew.
From there on, terms like: “spray, control, herbicide, kill, knock down, suppress, burn down, soil residual activity and season long control” literally peppered the success stories from the handful of featured “grass land stewards.”
I really wasn’t surprised. I’ve known that chemical use among non-organic grass farmers is prevalent. The farmers are convinced that they are normal and we are strange and paranoid.
Oh well.
In that flash of a moment... I knew I had to tell her.
At least I knew I should tell her. I had an ethical obligation to tell. But I hesitated. I instinctively knew it was dangerous. This could get me into trouble. Real trouble! Dow Chemical is a rich and powerful company…probably second only to Monsanto. And there are libel laws and they probably have a whole team of in-house lawyers...and I’m pretty sure they won’t serve me raw milk in jail...and I'll miss my wife and children so much! More mental pictures passing before my eyes...
After a moment’s wavering, I said to myself, “So what! Telling the truth never has been easy...nor safe. What good is discovered intelligence if the agent is too paralyzed to relay?”
Lest you think I’m playing this up, stick with me a bit. I’d like to show you the details which, for me, moved this decision into the ethical zone. Then you can decide for yourself.
You got to admit it’s impressive business strategy. If Dow can get farmers to buy and apply poison to their pastures to kill thistle along with all the nitrogen producing broadleaf legumes like clover and alfalfa so that their grass becomes yellow with nitrogen deficiency, the farmers will then need to go out and buy more chemicals...this time chemical nitrogen to boost the grass since they killed all the natural, God-given, nitrogen-producing legume plants with GrazonNext HL.
Sigh.
But the fact that this chemical, in general, makes a mess of God’s perfectly designed symbiotic relationships in the ecosystem isn’t the surprising part.
START QUOTE: “Application advantages
With GrazonNext HL, you can spray seasonally dry wetland and up to the water’s edge of running water, ponds and lakes.
GrazonNext HL has no grazing restrictions for any class of livestock, including lactating dairy cows, horses (including lactating mares) and meat animals prior to slaughter. GrazonNext HL can be sprayed while livestock graze in the same pasture.
However, label precautions do apply to forage treated with GrazonNext HL herbicide and to manure from animals that have consumed treated forage within the last three days. Treated forage and urine and manure from livestock on treated pasture may contain enough active ingredient to cause injury to sensitive broadleaf plants. Consult the label for full details.
The GrazonNext HL label prohibits use of the product on hay that will be distributed or made available for sale off the farm or ranch where it was harvested unless allowed by supplemental labeling. That supplemental labeling is available for Kentucky, but not Illinois, Indiana, Ohio or Pennsylvania. ...
No License
...GrazonNext HL is not a federally Restricted Use Pesticide and most states do not require a license for purchase or application.” END QUOTEI’m not making this up. And neither is Dow. The allowances above are clearly spelled out on the label. I have no idea how many arms were twisted, and politicians wined and dined and lobbyists paid, for Dow to get approval to label this chemical so loosely.
Without any warning at all.
And that, I feel, is not right.
And then there is the specific mention of how you don’t need a license to purchase or apply this poison, and oh yes, it’s fully legal and you are fully welcomed to spray right up to the water’s edge of any and all bodies of water and even in wetlands as long as they are dry at the moment...
Oh, but don’t forget that the hay you harvest from the fields is illegal to sell (in all but one state in the nation) because...after all...it has poison on it. But no worries; just feed the hay to your cows and sell the meat and milk. Just be careful, and remember that the manure and compost from your cows could kill plants.
This is so unbelievable. There is not much more to say. “Let them eat cake,” comes to mind and seems to have applications.
According to the document, at least some of this beef is being sold into the local, sustainable, farmer-connected, food market. At least one of the “grass land stewards” featured by Dow is doing home delivery of their grass-fed beef...in delivery vehicles painted to look like the breed of beef cows they raise on their farm.
How is that for a farmer connection?
I’m fairly sure the moms who trustingly buy this beef have no idea of the full story.
But maybe I misjudge. Maybe these farmers are transparent and tell these moms that the beautiful grass-fed cows producing their meat are sometimes eating poisoned grass right up to the butchering day. Maybe they explain to them what a marvelous technology this is! Maybe the farmers do explain to these moms that if they were to buy some of the farm’s compost to mulch their garden that their tomatoes, lettuce, spinach, strawberries and green beans would probably shrivel, their leaves would curl, turn yellow and quite likely die.
Maybe. But somehow I have my doubts...
It would be one thing if this kind of beef was only sold at conventional supermarkets. I think we all sort of know the lack of transparency to expect there. But direct marketed, straight-from-the-farmer, delivered-to-your-door grass-fed beef! It gives me a deep sense of sadness.
So now you understand why I had to share this. And now you know too and can tell your friends.
Yes, I did have to blow my cover...but the goods got delivered and the message went through. My guess is that a certain chemical giant will remove a certain lunatic farmer from their mailing list yet tonight.
Your Farmer ~ Edwin Shank