Pandemic Woes: Bad Weather Ahead?

The Island Queen in distance being pushed down the Ohio River by the ice. Source: http://www.cincinnativiews.net/images/Flood%20&%20Ice%20Gorge%2017rp.jpg; accessed July 23, 2009.

Fair Use Access Suburban Emergency Management Project,July 5, 2009

(now purged from the internet)

From the trenches,

Celeste

Biot #637: July 23, 2009

Meteorologist Preston C. Day (1859-1931) wrote in December 1918, “The severity of the weather experienced during December and January of the winter of 1917-1918 over the greater part of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains, and also over much of Canada and Alaska during the early part of the period, was so unusual as to the length of time the low temperatures persisted, the great area involved, and the degree of cold maintained, that some discussion of the contributing factors, and comparison with similar occurrences of previous years, seems desirable.” (1-2)

 

The sinking of the Princess in the Ohio River, winter of 1917-1918. Source: http://www.cincinnativiews.net/images/Flood%20&%20Ice%20Gorge%2018rp.jpg Continue reading

The Clock is Ticking: Save Washington Food from NAIS!

The clock is ticking in Washington and we have 48 hours left of farming freedom.  With 3 easy emails or phone calls (your choice) you can do your part to ensure that the National Animal Identification System, NAIS, remains voluntary in Washington State.  Why is Voluntary NAIS critical to Washington agriculture?

  • Mandatory NAIS transforms your real property into a government-controlled premises.  A government defined ‘Premises’ will not ensure that the food on your dinner plate is safe.  If you sign up for Premises Registration you are allowing someone to tell you what you can or can’t do on your own property, and you will get to pay for that privilege.
  • Mandatory NAIS electronic identification will not ensure the food you buy will be safe.  In fact, scientific-evidence, shows a direct link between electronic identification and cancer!  Ewwww, do you want cancer cells for dinner?
  • Mandatory NAIS surveillance, tracing, tracking will not ensure the food you eat is safe.  It is true government officials will know where outbreaks occur (psst…they already know through Google).  When agriculture officials conduct unaccountable surveillance and tracking the result is that your small local farmers, the ones growing healthy food, are driven out of business due to over regulation by a stack of alphabet agencies. Suspect animals are not tested, but are inhumanely slaughtered, whether they are sick or not!  This drives up the cost for your local food products.

One 4-ounce hamburger purchased at your local grocery store has come from as many as 1485 locations, most are out of the country.  Ask your Legislator how Mandatory NAIS will make this one 4-ounce hamburger safe?  COOL to the rescue?  How are they going to fit all those locations on the label?  And do you really have time to read  all the locations?  Please do your part today by supporting Voluntary NAIS and help to restore the USDA and WSDA stamp of approval to their historically renowned quality, really making your hamburger or food of choice safe.

One last thought before you spring into action to save our food!  Under public disclosure it was revealed that truckloads of diseased and undocumented cattle are flooding across the border headed straight for your dinner-plate.  Vegan?  Washingtonians have the same problem with your fruits and vegetables crop supply.

Why should you be forced to give up quality local food products while multi-national companies, in the food business solely for profit, make the big bucks while you and your family are subjected to an inferior and contaminated food supply?  True Homeland Security is access to fresh and local food products with farmers and ranchers who are free to do what they do best, bringing you quality local food.

Be a 10 Minute Citizen to Save our Food Supply:

Call or email:

1.  WA Senate Chairman Hatfield

Phone:  360-786-7636

Email: hatfield.brian@leg.wa.gov

2.  WA House Chairman Blake

Phone:  360-786-7870

Email:  blake.brian@leg.wa.gov

3.  Speaker of the House: Representative Chopp

Phone:  360-786-7920

Email:  chopp.frank@leg.wa.gov

What to say:

“Thank you for supporting HB 2086 and SB 5956.  I appreciate your concern to preserving local agriculture and quality & local food I count on for my family.

Please Exec these valuable bills out of committee today or tomorrow, and move them forward in the Legislative process.

Thank you for your interest and time protecting my local farmer and food.”

WA Voluntary NAIS Participation Bills are UP! We need your help

Washington State Voluntary NAIS has been introduced:

House and Senate

Six Steps to Farming Freedom

Status Report

Accompanying Documentation

“This is fantastic news,” said one Washington NoNAIS person upon hearing that House Bill (HB) 2086 was read this morning and assigned to the House Agriculture and Natural Resources Committee, and also that Senate Bill (SB) 5956 was read this morning and introduced to the Senate Agricultural and Rural Economic Development Committee at 10:30 this morning.

A team of three hit the Capital last Monday representing three impacted sectors: a Realtor, a livestock auctioneer, and a public relations manager. This team of three also represented the following species: bovine, horses, goats and poultry. With great enthusiasm and support on Friday proposed legislation regarding, “Voluntary participation in the National Animal Identification System”, known as NAIS, went into play in the Senate and the House.

Representative Shelly Short sponsored HB 2086.

Senator Mark Schoesler sponsored SB 5956.

(Please take time to thank these Legislator’s)

Both bills are located on the www.nonaiswa.org website. The proposed legislation language is identical, and is commonly referred to as Companion Bill set.

February 20th is our cutoff date for both HB 2086 and SB 5956. The Agricultural Committee Chairs must decide to hold a public hearing and move HB 2086 and SB 5956 by February 20th or the bill(s) die in committee.

The chairman of the Senate Ag Committee is Senator Brian Hatfield:

Email: hatfield.brian@leg.wa.gov

Phone: (360) 786-7636

The chair of the House Ag Committee is Representative Brian Blake.

Email: blake.brian@leg.wa.gov

Phone: (360) 786-7870

We Need Your Help!

NOW is the time we need your help! The team of three spent the entire last week in Olympia ~ 5 days ~ meeting with our representatives, educating, asking for support, asking for sponsors of these bills.  NOW IT IS UP TO YOU…

Proposed Legislation, HB 2086 & SB 5956 Status

HB 2086 and SB 5956 are new fresh new bills with new prime sponsors and new supporters. It is important to note that HB 2086 is not HB 1151. Due to the tremendous emotion and lack of unity unfortunately HB 1151 became a bad memory for many and so it was necessary to bring a squeaky clean and fresh bill with a unified support base to our Representatives and Senators. Continue reading

Got Hunger?

“History is indelibly written that revolution, anarchy, and tyranny are fellow travelers of hunger and malnutrition,” said a USDA scientist.  Lab 257

What are the consequences of families not eating well?

Back in the USSR


“The food and animal crop resources of the USSR would have to be damaged within a single growing season to the extent necessary to reduce the present average daily caloric intake from 2800 calories to 1400 calories, i.e., the starvation level. Reduction of the food resources to this level if maintained for 12 months would produce 20% fatalities, and would decrease manual labor performance by 95% and clerical and light labor by 80%.”

From the FAO:  Family Nutrition Guide

(also see Topic 11)

People who have poor diets and do not eat the right amounts of energy-rich food and nutrients are often sick and become malnourished. The type of malnutrition that occurs depends on which nutrients and how much of the required food energy are lacking (or are in excess) and for how long, and the age of the person.

1. Children and adults may eat too little food and become undernourished because they do not have enough food or they have a poor appetite. These people lack energy and many nutrients, which means:

• they have less energy so they cannot work, study or play as normal;

• their immune systems are weak so they become ill easily and/or are seriously ill;

• children stop growing and may lose weight. If very little food is eaten (often because of infection), a child may develop severe malnutrition (i.e. kwashiorkor or marasmus);

• adults lose weight. If a pregnant woman is undernourished, her unborn baby grows poorly. Continue reading

FAO Issues: State of the World’s Food AnGR

Are you tired? Hungry? Concerned that the food you eat is safe? Well the UN’s-FAO has a global plan to ‘protect’ animal genetic resources-that will surely solve your woes, won’t it? And how cheery….it was adopted on 9/11. And notice the acronym, AnGR, coincidence?

IMPLEMENTING THE GLOBAL PLAN OF ACTION FOR ANIMAL GENETIC RESOURCES

The FAO has determined that breeds of domesticated farm animal species are the primary biological capital for:

• Livestock development,

• Food security

• Sustainable rural development.

Yet this global organization feels the value of the vast majority of animal genetic resources is poorly understood.

The FAO believed that the 20th century has concentrated on a very small number of breeds worldwide, frequently without due consideration to the local production environment forces impacting on a breeds’ ability to survive, reproduce and produce.

The management of this biological capital has been neglected resulting into substantive eroding. It is the belief of the FAO that this trend is likely to accelerate with the massive increase in demand for livestock products mimicking the effective Ron Paul Revolution campaign adopting the banner the Livestock Revolution.

The FAO suggests the use and development of livestock breeds, and the conservation of valuable breeds of little current interest to farmers must be substantially upgraded for future food security and sustainable rural development.

Sustainable utilization, development and conservation are critical and complementary technical elements. A range of rapidly developing molecular and reproductive biotechnologies also has important implications for AnGR management.

FAO has the global mandate to develop the First Country-driven Report on the State of the World’s AnGR, and the Global Strategy for the Management of Farm Animal Genetic Resources.

http://www.fao.org/ag/againfo/programmes/en/genetics/documents/Interlaken/ITC-AnGR073_en.pdf

Before the USDA: Neolitic Milk

Imagine, if you will, a time when people grew food and milked dairy animals without regulation. Yes, it’s true! People actually milked dairy animals and consumed the milk without government interference. Contrary to what many of you might have heard people survived, dare I say, even thrived on this nutritious unadulterated milk. The author does favor the processing or pasteurization of milk a view that has not been borne out by unbiased scientific-evidence.
A potted history of milk

 

(PhysOrg.com) — Humans were processing cattle milk in pottery vessels more than two thousand years earlier than previously thought, according to new research from the University of Bristol.

In work published online in Nature this week, Professor Richard Evershed and colleagues describe how the analysis of more than 2,200 pottery vessels from southeastern Europe, Anatolia and the Levant extends the early history of milk by two millennia to the seventh millennium BC.

Vessels most likely to have been used for food preparation were selected to test where milk use started, and whether the use of milk products first began in the region where farming was pioneered – the Fertile Crescent – or whether it was an innovation of other regions.

Organic residues preserved in the pottery suggest that even before 6,500 BC milk was processed and stored, although this varied regionally depending on the farming techniques used.

Cattle, sheep and goats were familiar domesticated animals by the eighth millennium BC but until now, the first clear evidence for milk use was the late fifth millennium.

This research not only extends the history, but shows that milking was particularly important in areas that were more favourable to cattle compared to other regions where sheep and goats were more common.

Professor Evershed said: “Our results provide new insights into the emergence of dairying as a component of the domestication of animals. They take the early history of milk use back to the seventh millennium BC, early in the evolution of animal domestication and pottery production and use.

“Processing milk would have had two important advantages, providing a means of storing surplus milk as products, that is cheese, ghee, and so on, making them available throughout the year, and providing a solution for any problems of lactose intolerance; most lactose intolerant people have fewer problems with consuming processed milk products.

“The regional differences we found are also significant, suggesting that early farming was not a fixed package but developed in different ways in different areas, probably in response to different environmental conditions and to the different cultural choices of early farmers.”

USDA Guide To Produce Farm Investigations

This is from the year 2000. Currently it is much more complex with increased inter-agency involvement.

Link: FDA Farm Questionaire

Link: Farm Investigation

INTRODUCTION

Over the last several years, there has been an increase in reported outbreaks of foodborne illness associated with both domestic and imported fresh fruits and vegetables. These outbreaks have raised concern for the safety of fresh fruits and vegetables that are not processed to reduce or eliminate pathogens.

There are two primary reasons for conducting a farm investigation:

1. an outbreak and trace back investigation that implicated the farm and related operations

2. follow-up to a positive produce sample. Prior to implicating the farming operation, all other possible sources of contamination in the distribution chain should have been fully investigated.

Farm investigations are just one aspect of FDA’s produce safety efforts, which also include domestic and international education and outreach in Good Agricultural Practices (GAPs). These efforts are intended to improve agricultural practices to reduce risks of microbial contamination of fresh fruits and vegetables. These ongoing efforts involve cooperation and collaboration with industry and trade associations, academia, and other government agencies. Continue reading

No RFID Bargin

Here is RFID propaganda at its finest. What is really amazing is the price. It’s at the end.

RFID for Animals, Food and Farming 2008-2018

Order Now

Description

This report concerns RFID in the food supply chain, from arable farming and livestock to presentation in the retail store. We also cover benefits if the RFID tag stays on the food to the private home. Because the tagging of pets and use of RFID on other animals and in conservation are closely allied topics, these are analyzed too.
Of the many uses for RFID, the food supply chain is set to rise dramatically to $4.97 billion spent on the systems plus the tags in 2018, becoming more important than any other application of RFID. In due course, the tagging of individual items will attract the most investment, benefiting all in the supply chain but tagging of conveyances, pallets, cases, vehicles and equipment will also be important.
There are many reasons for the growth of both of these markets, because RFID is increasingly used to track, monitor condition, prevent errors and theft, and even locate from a distance. This increases sales, improves customer satisfaction and reduces costs. As if this were not enough, there is increasing legislation driving the use of RFID for safety, notably with livestock and pets, for the rapid and optimal response to disease outbreaks, proof of vaccination, registration and so on. Continue reading

New Farm Welfare Scheme

On July 17th it was announced that there is a new animal welfare scheme that takes the National Animal Identification System (NAIS) to a new level. Phase III of NAIS is tracking and surveillance. According to global agriculture controllers animal welfare is one of the things that would be monitored and tracked. How long has your horse been in the pasture? Have you massaged your pet today? Are your animal’s vaccinations compliant? How many flies landed on your cow today? The guidelines can go on forever and be a living document that is reworked at the whim of those in power.

The Animal Welfare Approved program will provide financial incentive through a grant program for up to $10,000 to farmers who will comply with the farm welfare mandate dictated by global standards and apply those standards to their farms. The announcement was made by the President of the Animal Welfare Institute Cathy Liss and Director of the Animal Welfare Approved program Andrew Gunther. There are 600 farms currently enrolled in the program which promotes animal well-being, sustainability, and humane family farms according to global definition. Only those farmers who participate in the program and feather their next with the devalued greenback’s will be classified as conscientious farmers, participants in good husbandry, only if you choose to exclusively raise your animals with their standard of compassion. The Animal Welfare Approved, whose accreditation was recently endorsed by the World Society for the Protection of Animals as having the most stringent animal welfare standards, is attempting to set the standard on how farm animals should be taken care of. One of the headlines of this website is ‘Shopping for Animal Welfare’ and as you can guess it is sponsored by the UN. Continue reading

NASDA Food Emergency Template

These days you do not only have to be concerned with starvation in the goal to depopulate but the same powers that created your lack of food have created a food emergency template to come to the rescue from a variety of natural and intentional food related threats.

This template is part of an effort to develop a seamless system of food control from local, state and federal perspectives. Overall, it addresses the goal of enhancing the domination of the United States agricultural industry and food destabilization through the increased control, contamination, rationing, and eventual termination of American agriculture agricultural planning. Continue reading