I’m attaching, in full, a post from the American Grassfed Association (AGA) at the bottom of this post. First here are my thoughts on this change and what it means for you, the consumer.
Our inspector for the USDA has encouraged me to apply for the grassfed certification, something I assured him I would do. His statement to me was it is so easy to get and I already do all the right things on my farm. I just fill out a form and attest that I only feed grass to my cows. Wait for the faceless government entity to certify that my paperwork is correct and viola! I’m a “grassfed” cattle producer.
There are a couple of things wrong with that though in my opinion.
I don’t even have signs yet for the farm. That means that yes, it is easy to get certified but I have other things that are more important right now.
I meet you all individually and we tour the farm, meet, the animals, and discuss our practices. Our customers are more informed about where their meat comes from than 99.9% of US customers before they take their first bite of our product.
All having the “grassfed” label does for us is to help people who we never meet have some indication of how our animals were raised. Since we pretty much only sell right off the farm, it is rare that a customer hasn’t been here before they cook up one of our products.
But mainly my problem is that I’ve never bought into these labels. They are so easy to corrupt. Organic has many examples of why it isn’t all it’s cracked up to be. Having a grassfed label, where all I had to do was attest on a one page form that my cow was grass fed, with no audit process, just didn’t seem like a label that carried much weight despite the government backing of the label.
Our industry is rife with people and corporations making claims that aren’t true to get a piece of your wallet. As a grassfed producer, I just didn’t see much value in being part of that system and having “grassfed” on my label so despite my promise to get on it, I haven’t even started the process.
Now the below comes out, and it looks like they’ve done away with the extremely low bar to grassfed that was in place. Instead, you simply state that your animals are grassfed based on your own standards of what that means. I’ve told people for years that all cows are grass fed. They look at me quizzically, and I explain that all cows, even feedlot cows, spend a portion of their lives out on pasture eating grass. Then they are boxed up and sent to the feedlots at some point to be fed out on grain. Maybe they are 300 pounds when they go, maybe they are 600 but at some point they were out on grass. If a producer wants to call that grassfed, by and large he could. And now going forward he can even easier because to him, that may mean “grassfed” and that is good enough.
What I tell my customers is that you need to ask if the cows are grass finished. That means they were fed, up till slaughter, grass. However grass finished isn’t a label approved by the government and I doubt you’ll see it anytime soon. It wouldn’t be able to be co-opted so easily and used by big ag to fool you.
So once again, labels don’t mean what you think they mean and you can’t trust the government. That means you need to get to know your farmer and know where your meat comes from.
Here is the text of the email from AGA.
On January 12, USDA’s Agricultural Marketing Service rescinded the standards for the grassfed marketing claim. These were the minimal standards behind the grassfed label found on meat sold wholesale or retail. The reasons for the rescission are somewhat unclear, but according to AMS representatives, they have reinterpreted their authority and decided that developing and maintaining marketing standards does not fit within their agency.
Some Background
After a lengthy public process that lasted several years, AMS introduced the grassfed standard in 2006. USDA’s Food Safety and Inspection Service, the regulatory arm that approves meat labels, was charged with enforcing the standard for those who chose to use it. But because FSIS required no audit or other verification other than a producer-signed affidavit, the term was sometimes misused and was often confusing, both for producers and consumers. The growth of grassfed demand in the marketplace only fueled the misperceptions.
Going forward, FSIS will continue to approve the grassfed label claim, but producers will each define their own standards. FSIS is only considering the feeding protocol in their label approvals — other issues such as confinement; use of antibiotics and hormones; and the source of the animals, meat, and dairy products will be left up to the producer.
So what does this mean?
For Producers
For American Grassfed Association Approved Producers, there will be no change. AGA’s standards are more comprehensive and stringent than the AMS standard, and FSIS will continue to accept those standards for the grassfed claim. AGA certified producers may continue using the AGA logo on their meat labels.
Non-AGA certified producers using the AMS grassfed standards as the basis for their label claim must update their paperwork with FSIS, but will not have to reapply for label approval. They will have to assert that the standards they use are their own.
Producers who have never used the grassfed claim may seek grassfed label approval from FSIS as long as they provide “documentation about what grassfed means to them,” according to Tammie Ballard of FSIS.
Producers who feed grain can make a grassfed claim if they spell out the percentage of grass on the label: 90 percent grassfed, 75 percent grassfed, 10 percent grassfed, and so on. Ballard says this has always been true, and approval is on a case-by-case basis. How this is enforced is unclear, however.
The Small and Very Small program will continue, and AMS will be in touch with those producers to discuss any changes.
The unfortunate thing for producers who have worked hard to build quality grassfed programs is that, with no common standards in place, they will be competing in the marketplace with the industrial meatpackers who can co-opt the grassfed label.
For Consumers
Once again, consumers lose out on transparency and an understanding of what they’re buying. Grassfed has always been a source of some confusion, but now, with no common standards underpinning it, consumers will find it increasingly difficult to trust the grassfed label. Like other mostly meaningless label terms like natural, cage-free, and free-range, grassfed will become just another feel-good marketing ploy used by the major meatpackers to dupe consumers into buying mass-produced, grain-fed, feedlot meat.
For those who want to buy real grassfed with a label they can trust:
Buy from a farmer you know, and ask plenty of questions. Do you supplement with grain or grain by-products such as brewers and distillers grain or by-products from ethanol production? Where do you get your animals? Do you use antibiotics or hormones? Do you feed your animals in confinement?
If you don’t have the luxury of knowing your producer personally, then look for the American Grassfed Approved logo. It’s the first and only standard developed by producers, range scientists, veterinarians, animal nutritionists, and other experts that guarantees the meat comes from animals fed a 100-percent forage diet, never confined to a feedlot, never fed antibiotics or hormones, and born and raised on American family farms. No other certification offers those assurances, and no other grassfed program uses true third-party audits to ensure compliance.
Avoid buying inexpensive grocery store grassfed. Chances are good that it’s imported– although now that Congress has eliminated County of Origin Labeling, there’s no way to be certain-and the animals were probably confined and supplemented with some form of grain.
Avoid buying meat with a grassfed percentage on the label. It’s either grassfed or it’s not. Studies have shown that even a small amount of grain in the animal’s diet affects the nutritional profile of the meat.
American Grassfed Association is the industry pioneer and leader, being the first organization to institute standards that most closely match what consumers want when they buy grassfed. The organization is led by American family farmers who have been in the business for decades, and who understand the unique challenges of producing products from healthy animals that are good for people, good for the planet, and good for rural communities.
If you have questions, please email us at aga@americangrassfed.org
We ran out of bacon right after Christmas! I know that hurt the feelings of a number of you however as of yesterday we have some porky goodness to salve your wounds.
I took 3 hogs to the processor back in December and yesterday morning they were finally ready. I wasn’t quite prepared for how much the hogs weighed, over 900 pounds for the three of them! We got back 275 pounds of sausage!
With that much product at once, we were able to get a few non-standard items to meet the requests of some of you guys.
Most people are happy with the sage sausage we normally carry but a few folks (me included) like hot sausage. We have 25 pounds of it in the freezer for you.
We’ve had a few requests for a whole pork loin. I got one this trip so whoever is the first to grab it gets the prize. We’ll see how this one moves. If there is enough demand we might start bringing these in for normal stock.
All this porky goodness has been wedged into the freezers so make plans to swing by and stock up. Of course we have plenty of chicken, beef, wine, soap, honey, etc as well.
I’ve been published on a blog where I didn’t pay for the hosting and somebody besides my friends actually read it. That makes me famous, right?
All joking aside I’m actually proud to be featured on Carolina Farm Stewardship Association’s blog as a guest blogger. Over time I’ve gotten the comment from a lot of customers after reading some of our posts, especially our origin story, that I should be a writer. I always smile and thank the person but didn’t really do much about it. However now I’m a published blogger.
Since I’m a real writer now, I’ve taken the path of all the great writers and am starving. Turns out blogging doesn’t actually “pay” in the traditional, I can feed my family, sense. I think that’s good. I heard you’re supposed to suffer for your art. I’m sure it will make me better. It kinda of reminds me of when I met Tom Knapp, a famous exhibition shooter. I noted that he and I were wearing the same exact shoes. I walked up and told him I was looking to be as great as he was. I pointed to our shoes, and said I was starting from the ground up. He laughed and we visited for a bit. Great guy.
But back to business. The first two in the four-part series has been posted on their site. The next posts will be published over the following months so make sure to follow their blog so you can see and follow along.
We started our little farm blog in the middle of 2013. At that time writing on the internet was kind of scary. Not knowing what the reaction would be, maybe (probably) saying something stupid and getting flamed for it. Learning new software. Fortunately, nobody was looking anyway so the mistakes, while immortal via the power of the interweb, weren’t really that big of a deal. At the end of the year I got a surprise email from WordPress showing our first year’s statistics.
That first partial year we had 4100 site views! Wow! And one day, we had 123 visits. In one day! I was pretty stoked. In my post about the statistics I focused on the fact that I’d been trying to post every day and I pretty much had. 160 posts was just about on target. Having some views just made it all the better.
Last year I didn’t publish the site statistics because I was busy selling my company and going into farming full-time. But the report is still out there so for comparison here is last years report.
It was our first full year of having the website and the growth was tremendous. From 4100 visits to 29,000! I kind of felt like a real blogger, averaging almost 2500 visits per month to our little farm website. With those numbers, it wasn’t just my mom and a couple of friends. We had real readership. One day we had almost 600 visits in a single day. Now we were cooking and I could feel a little cocky about my blogging career. Of course I wasn’t getting paid, or really selling that much meat but we really didn’t have that much to sell at that time anyway so I took what success I could.
This year’s statistics have just been released. 51,000 visits to our site, averaging 4,250 per month. We didn’t exactly double our growth but still awesome. Except the report came out before the end of December. In just December, we had over 11,500 site visits, meaning if we keep this pace for 2016, we’ll have over 125,000 visitors to our little farm site. That is a staggering amount of traffic for a site showing pictures of piglets and selling a little bit of meat on farm only. This volume also means we’ve added in things like our online scheduler and cleaned up some of the menus. We never really stop working on the site so expect more to come.
Also, we are adding more product all the time. We already have honey, soap, jams, and also wine. We have recently begun stocking raw pet milk. We have in the works fresh farm baked breads and pies and also cheeses will be coming in January.
Who knows what 2016 will bring, but we are looking forward to it, whatever it is.
With the cows and the chickens working overtime (plus a few farmers), we are back in business on milk and eggs.
Also for those waiting on pork products, I dropped off three pigs this morning at the processor so we can get some pastured, grain-free, GMO free, anti-biotic free, porky goodness coming our way.
We were only scheduled to take two pigs but we had such a run on pork the last few days that we added an extra pig to the load this morning.
That should give us about 500 pounds of pork coming our way, mostly different sausages and chops. However we are bringing in one whole boneless loin for those of you who have asked for one in the past. We are hoping to get everything ready and picked up this week but it may be next week before everything is done. There is only so much we can do to rush the processor.
Either way, we’ll be sure to let you all know when we get bacon, breakfast sausage, pigs feet (yes, I ran out of pigs feet!) etc, back in stock. In the meantime, we still have plenty of pork chops, Boston butts, BBQ, etc in the freezer, plus all the beef and chicken in our other freezers. Just hop on our handy online scheduler and make arrangements to stop by and grab some meaty goodness.
Every year, SWMBO has Santa Claus come to the house to see all the kids. This all started when one of our friends kid, who is autistic, wasn’t too happy about seeing the big man at the mall. So SWMBO arranged for Mr. Claus to come to us at the farm. 10 years later we are still at it and Santa has gotten to know all the kids as they’ve grown up.
Everybody gets time with Kris Kringle and he makes the whole thing very personal for each kid. It’s quite amazing to watch and I’m very happy she started this tradition. As you’d expect, Santa has it going on and knows how to make the kids feel special.
Each year, the kids get older, and we add new kids to the mix.
This year, Santa wanted to meet Holly, our runt piglet who lives in the house with us (so far.) I wasn’t sure he really wanted to meet her but he said he loved pigs so I went and got her for him.
Holly, like many babies on Santa’s lap for the first time, screamed and cried the whole time. He was very nice but she wasn’t having it. The visit culminated with Holly biting Santa on the finger, guaranteeing coal in her stocking for some time to come. He then put her down on the ground to calm down.
Holly showed her displeasure with the whole experience by promptly backing up and peeing on the carpet. You can see SWMBO and Grandma (bottom left) both diving to catch her but it didn’t slow Holly down one bit. I’m laughing, of course. What else can you do?
Everyone had a large time. It’s not every day you get professional pictures (thanks Diane!!) of a piglet and Santa Claus.
I hope everyone had as good of a Christmas as we did and I hope you are ready for a great new year.
We’ve had so much business lately that we’ve decided it was time to add in a booking app for scheduling appointments. This is to make it easier for you to get a time to stop by in the future, saving you from having to call/email/text me and go through the back and forth of finding a time that works for both of us and scheduling the appointment. Now you can simply click on the link on our website at the top of the page “schedule a visit” and pick the date and time you’d like to come by. You also pick whether you are looking for a tour or to just stop by and pick up meat. There is logic built into the app that should book the appropriate amount of time and not double book so we mitigate possible conflicts.
I’ve spent a couple of days setting up the new booking system. It’s not perfect, but hopefully this new system will make things easier for you when you are trying to get out to the farm. If you have any trouble, you can always get me via text or email. The purpose of this thing is certainly not to hide behind automation. We’re always glad to hear from you.
After last weekends rush, we had to get things back together in the store and ready for everyone’s needs before Christmas. I’ve spent the last couple of days hauling all kinds of product; chicken, eggs, wine, honey, soap, and pork. Tomorrow I’ll be hauling beef to finish off all the empty corners in the store so we will be bursting at the seams ready for your needs before Christmas.
We have more product on hand than we’ve ever had before so we should have everything you need to wow the in-laws this Christmas.
And since you’ll be hosting your family all day, don’t forget the social lubricant we just started carrying. It makes the day go easier.
We’ve also had some folks from out of town ask us to do gift certificates. We do indeed do gift certificates so if you’re reading this from afar, just drop me a line and we can make something up for that special someone who lives here in North Carolina.
Nothing goes better with some good beef, pork, or chicken than a bottle of local NC wine. Thanks to our long time friends at Adam’s Vineyards in Willow Springs, NC we now are able to stock their wine in our farm store (Thank you Mrs. Adams and Quincy!).
Both traditional NC sweet wines and their signature dry wines are available. We also have Merlot in stock as well if you prefer a more conventional grape. Have you not tried Adam’s wines before? The judges at this year’s State Fair did, and gave them best of show in their category!
And for the kiddos, we have grape juice and grape cider (we call it “kid wine”). If you want some juice or cider for your kids, you better hurry before my kids find it. They drink it by the gallon.
This is just part of what we have on hand. We also have beef, pork, and chicken in stock with more coming soon. And of course we still have lots of cuteness in the piggy department.
On the way to the barn I stopped to marvel at how beautiful everything was. I was walking with Spork to go get into our daily chores so it was already a good day. Then I noticed the layer of fog hanging over the pasture. It looked like we were in the mountains right at the cloud layer. The sky was just turning blue above as the sun was coming over the horizon (I feel sorry for people who don’t get up early. They miss the best part of the day.)
The picture above doesn’t really do it justice. Luckily I stopped again and took a panoramic shot so you can see the sunrise as well.
Here you get a better idea of what we were looking at. You need to click on the picture to blow it up to full size so you can see what we saw.
The sun is just coming up on the left. The sky is just turning blue. Pink clouds rising with the sun, a fog layer hanging over the farm, and it’s already 55 degrees heading for 75. What a gorgeous December day!