thought for the day: organic = sustainable
what customers are saying: I left Countryside for cheaper, "All-Natural" feed. When my customers started COMPLAINING about the taste of my eggs I came back to Countryside!
— Better Feed Makes Better Eggs, Better Eggs Make Happier Customers
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By Kevin, on March 21st, 2013
Welcome to Countryside! We are glad that you are here. What can we do to make your backyard/ market/ family/ homestead/ grass farming better? If you have questions we would like to help. Call 1-888-699-7088. Or email info@countrysideorganics.com
By Bill, on May 24th, 2013 Countryside Organics is pleased to announce our newest reseller, ANDERSON FAMILY FARM, of APEX, NORTH CAROLINA.
Give ANDERSON FAMILY FARM a call at 919-414-8233.
Check out all of our quality feed resellers, here.
Check out a list of producers using quality Countryside Organics products, here.
To be included in either directory email info@countrysideorganics.com
By Bill, on May 21st, 2013 We received a delightful email from a Wyoming volunteer librarian who had used our links page to help a group of young gardeners explore the internet for information about Organic Farming and Gardening. They are working on a gardening project for National Garden Week in June.
Included in the email was a link to a terrific page of links about organics that one of the young gardeners had discovered and shared with her teacher. We think it’s a terrific link and would like to recommend it to all our readers. It’s so good, in fact, that we have added it to our News Links category on the front page. Many thanks to the young gardner (you know who you are!) for sharing and helping us learn more about organics!
And thank you to the very cool librarian who made this all happen. Take Care, Ms. W!
By Bill, on May 10th, 2013 Countryside Organics is pleased to announce our newest reseller, Jason Rogers and ROGERS FEED, of PELZER, SOUTH CAROLINA.
Give Jason Rogers and ROGERS FEED a call at 864-947-6925.
Check out all of our quality feed resellers, here.
Check out a list of producers using quality Countryside Organics products, here.
To be included in either directory email info@countrysideorganics.com
By Bill, on May 10th, 2013 Countryside Organics is pleased to announce our newest reseller, Penny Jones Napier and THE BIG BAD WOOF, of HYATTSVILLE, MARYLAND.
Give Penny Jones Napier and THE BIG BAD WOOF a call at 202-291-5575.
More information about THE BIG BAD WOOF, here.
Check out all of our quality feed resellers, here.
Check out a list of producers using quality Countryside Organics products, here.
To be included in either directory email info@countrysideorganics.com
By Bill, on May 7th, 2013 How do you know what is in your food and how it was grown? Ask your farmer! Here are the basic growing methods:
Conventionally Grown
This type of farming allows chemical pesticides, chemical herbicides, chemical fungicides, sludge, chemical fertilizers, bee-killing neonicotinoids, ionizing radiation and transgenically (GMO) modified seeds. Is this stuff in your food? Ask your farmer!
Non-GMO
This could also be called, Conventionally Grown Without Transgenics. It’s food or feed grown without genetically modified organisms. It is not, however, a promise of pesticide-free, herbicide-free, chemical fertilizer-free, bee-killing neonicitinoid-free, etc. It just means that the seed used is non-transgenic. Non-GMO is not the equivalent of Certified Organic. Non-GMO allows for toxic chemicals that are not allowed in Organics. What is in the food? Ask your farmer!
Certified Organic
At Countryside Organics we make certified organic, soy-free feeds in Virginia’s only Certified Organic Feed Mill. No toxic pesticides or herbicides. No bee-killing neonicitinoids. No artificial preservatives or additives. No genetically engineered anything. Grains in our feeds are grown in rich, healthy, sustainable soils. Our feeds are nutritionally complete, high quality, soy-free, probiotic, organic. And we are local.
In addition to our own Certified Organic Feeds we also manufacture Healthy Minerals for Livestock. And we carry all kinds of essential organic products for your garden, pasture, orchard and dairy.
We encourage you to ask your farmer for organic products. Ask for chemical-free produce and meat. Ask for organic products that are better for you, better for the animals and better for the environment. Thanks and have a great day!
By Bill, on May 6th, 2013 Patricia Foreman and Lisa Dearden will be taking their Chickens and You primary training series to Richmond May 15 & 16th at the William Byrd Community House, 224 South Cherry Street, Richmond, VA 23220, from 5:30 to 9:00 pm. There will be two sessions each day:
Wednesday, May 15th
1) Laying Hens for Egg Production and,
2) Raising Baby Chicks from Scratch
Thursday, May 16th
1) Garden Chicks: Introduction to Growing Food With and for Chickens and,
2) Chicken Whispering: Discover the Chicken You Never Knew
For more information please visit the Chickens and YOU Website.
By Bill, on April 24th, 2013
By Bill, on April 22nd, 2013 Did you miss it? Is it a relic? Shouldn’t everyday be earth day? Here are some different takes on the day:
America less concerned about environment now than when Earth Day began. - Christian Science Monitor
Things that can make a difference – Rodale.com
Why April 22nd? - Earthsky.org
Global Warming Update - Christian Science Monitor
Have a great earth day!
By Bill, on April 19th, 2013 Does the neverending prospect of a revolving door USDA/Justice/Monsanto policy get you down? Do you feel like it’s an incredible uphill battle to take on the corporate giants who are constantly gaining ever more rights than the individual? Well, it’s not your secret shame. You are not alone.
We spent some time outdoors at the City Market and Tom Tom Festival in Charlottesville, VA last weekend. Kevin spoke on raising chickens without drugs and Pat Foreman joined us with her hen, Ofrah Henfry. It was a beautiful day. We talked to lots of people and we talked to lots of University of Virginia students, which was a treat. The University students we met were, on the whole, very aware of food issues. And they were curious about policy. And they were pretty cynical, too, about the US and our food policy. They wanted to know what we could do. It all seemed so gloomy.
So we told them to get involved. That we had to work to get the government back from the corporatists. And that it was possible. And that it was going to take a lot of work. And we tried to cheer them with the fact that the GMO Giants are fighting an increasingly hostile battle and that the demand for organics is outpacing the conversion of acreage to organic acres. And that local food systems were returning to local economies in new and positive ways. Just look around at this farmer’s market. And that their voices were powerful and their silence gave consent to the politicians to make people more indifferent to what they should value most. And off they went.
If you have a chance to cheer up a kid about taking on US Food policy and the agri-industrial-government complex, please do.
Here is a good summary of Monsanto’s recent ups and downs.
By Bill, on April 16th, 2013 We just received a large order of Field Peas. They are purple. Why are we offering this up to you, you might ask? Because we know you are going to be asking about them! Green Peas, Yellow Peas, Purple Peas! One of the beauties of organics is that there is such diversity. Of course when your hen or your goat looks at one of these purple peas, she might take her time before trying one because, well, because they are purple! But they are honest to goodness certified organic field peas. Enjoy!
 Purple Peas
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what customers are saying: I would just like to say that I am extremely satisfied with the
quality of your soy-free organic chicken feeds. My laying hens have been raised on it since birth and are now healthy and productive. I know that what I am feeding them is good for the Earth, good for the chickens, and good for myself, and free from herbicides, pesticides, and the hormones in soy. Everyone who has tried my eggs has commented on how much better they taste than supermarket eggs. Plus, the feed is always shipped fast so I can order a new bag a few days before I run out and have the new feed on time.
— Max Z., Massachusetts
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