Hi Rolfe, I was a little surprised by your stance, can you clarify something for me - does meat in the UK or EU with the "organic" certification require that the animals have had no vaccination or been administered regulated veterinary medicines? This seems like a radical extreme to me, and counter to the ethical treatment principal that I thought underpinned organic animal farming?
(Baring in mind most of the info I have associated with organic farming has come from
this guy so may be confusing "organic" with "ethical", "free range" etc.)
No, it's not as extreme as that. Vaccination is not banned, but very much frowned on. Up till now the idea has been that organic farmers can only vaccinate if they can demonstrate that there is a real present risk of the disease in question - which usually means that they have to suffer an actual outbreak before they can vaccinate. This is a ridiculous sop to the anti-vax lobby. There's absolutely no issue with vaccination and food production and it's ignorant and reactionary to act as if there is.
Other prophylactics are also very much frowned on. Routine worming is discouraged as much as possible, with strategies of moving to clean pasture and so on employed instead. The trouble is that these strategies are often not enough - they're just things that any sensible farmer should incorporate into his management plan to
reduce parasite challenge and so
reduce the requirement for medication. However, there is almost always going to be the occasion when infection does occur, and then you need to treat - moving to clean pasture
then won't help the animals, all it will do is contaminate the clean pasture. It all seems to be about not using sensible prophylactic regimens that have been carefully worked out over many years, just hope to avoid the problem and then reluctantly treat in the face of actual outbreaks of disease when they occur.
When actual treatment is required, the general rule is, whatever the licensed withdrawal period for the medicine, double or even triple it. There's no rationale for this at all. Medicine withdrawal times are very well researched and evidence-based, so what these guys are really saying is, we don't trust your science so we'll just impose our own arbitrary rules. If meat animals aren't close to slaughter it doesn't always make so much difference, but for example with milk there's a big issue. There's a reluctance to treat, because of the long time interval before that animal's milk can be "organic" again - but never mind, it can always go into the normal milk supply, it just won't command the premium organic price.
I repeat, if there is a demonstrable problem with residues etc. in the ordinary food supply, then that
must be addressed for the benefit of
everyone - including observing the precautionary principle. It makes no sense to create a second category which purports to eliminate this supposed problem while leaving the bulk of the food supply unchanged. However, if there is no such problem, and in general there is no problem in the first place, the organic hype is as much about demonising ordinary food as anything else, then where is the justification?
And I already said what I think about their promotion of homoeopathy. There's no chance I'll even consider that the organic movement is in any way scientific while they promote magic water as a safe and effective and residue-free treatment for animals.
In my opinion the whole "ethical" thing is pure marketing. Ethical is about looking after your animals properly and giving them the best possible standards of health and welfare.
Every farmer ought to be about that, and sorry, adding in prohibitions and restrictions on the use of licensed ethical medication is not going to improve matters. "Organic" animals which are healthy and well cared for are in that situation
despite the organic rules, not because of them.
Rolfe.