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26 votes
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The food timeline
11 votes -
A tree a minute: One man planting 1440 trees in a day
7 votes -
California farmers are installing solar, providing financial stability and saving water
12 votes -
Less rain, more wheat: How Australian farmers defied climate doom
15 votes -
How India became a french fry superpower
20 votes -
Nebraska sues neighboring Colorado over how much water it’s drawing from the South Platte River
19 votes -
Why America built a forest from Canada to Texas
14 votes -
We are setting out to rewild an Icelandic wetland in a complex project involving birds, freshwater habitats and large areas of degraded peatland
10 votes -
The Danish government deputized private detectorists to unearth artifacts buried in farm fields. Their finds are revealing the country's past in extraordinary detail.
9 votes -
John Deere must face US Federal Trade Commission lawsuit over its tractor repair monopoly, judge rules
44 votes -
US cattle ranchers may have to relearn how to fight an old enemy — the New World screwworm
29 votes -
Farmers who don't farm: The curious rise of the zero-sales farmer (2017)
9 votes -
Groundwater is rapidly declining in the Colorado River Basin, satellite data show
31 votes -
A newly surfaced document reveals the US beef industry’s secret climate plan
35 votes -
Can electro-agriculture revolutionize the way we grow food?
12 votes -
The US Food and Drug Administration just approved the first CRISPR-edited pigs for food
23 votes -
Startups are making synthetic butter and oil
12 votes -
The ripe stuff: In pursuit of the perfect fruit
10 votes -
How dairy robots are changing work for cows (and farmers)
11 votes -
Navigating differences in risk tolerance regarding health
Hey Tildoes, my partner and I have been navigating a broad, government level health challenge and I was hoping to pick the hivemind for help on navigating it. As some of you may have seen in...
Hey Tildoes, my partner and I have been navigating a broad, government level health challenge and I was hoping to pick the hivemind for help on navigating it.
As some of you may have seen in articles posted here, there was a massive fire at the lithium ion battery plant in Moss Landing a few months ago. It ended up spewing a slough of nasty chemicals into the air, which inevitably landed in the surround agricultural fields and waterways. My partner was in Australia when the fire occured, thank god, but was still freaking out about downstream effects. There have been studies from a 3rd party group from UC Davis and San Jose State - that found elevated levels of heavy metals - however those have been downplayed by local agencies claiming there are not major impacts and that distribution was surface level. With everything we know about state and federal agencies oversight, sometimes they are less than transparent about reporting toxic impact factors - like what happened in Hinkley and was popularized by the movie Erin Brockovich. However today the California Certified Organic Farmers put out their own update and press release. They summarized what has happened and seem to be endorsing the safety of the farms they have certified in the area.
So here is the rub: Federal, state, county, and local agencies have determined there is not significant contamination, the CCOF has agreed with these agencies, and my partner is still uncomfortable eating local produce. It feels a bit like we're back in covid times, and she is looking for cherry picked studies to justify strict behavioral and consumption restrictions within our household. We have always agreed to "shift our risk tolerance according to data" and now - with the Trump administration and a general distrust of our fed/state agencies - she's advocating we continue to avoid these foods until there is "definitive proof" that the food is safe.
I'm kind of at a loss of what do to. On one hand, it's a minor thing to change where we get our food. Food systems are complex and we can kind of get it from anywhere. On the other hand, I love my time at our farmers markets, experimenting with new foods, and supporting our local community. I also think the more obscure the process from farm to shelf, the more possibility for health/employee/environmental shenanigans by the producers. To me buying broadly "American" or "Mexican" kale doesn't mean we aren't going to have similar or worse impacts to our food.
I'm trying to find a reasonable middle ground or a bellwether indicator we can use as a go/no-go, but every time I think we've agreed on one it feels like the goal posts have been moved. Do any of you have similar issues or possible navigated differences in risk tolerance during Covid well? If so, how did you do so? I know this is a bit of a random thread, but I'd love to hear what you think!
16 votes -
World’s first case of bird flu in sheep detected in England
13 votes -
The history and economics of frozen orange juice
9 votes -
The Loess plateau was the most eroded place on Earth until China took action
7 votes -
Wyoming pays $150,000 to settle lawsuit over botched prosecution of hemp farmers
12 votes -
Hundreds of livestock breeds have gone extinct – but some Australian farmers are keeping endangered breeds alive
5 votes -
A newly designed $5 snakebite armor quickly earns US student 18,000+ orders
29 votes -
Beekeepers say catastrophic honeybee losses are cause for alarm
37 votes -
Cattle gallstones are worth an absolute fortune — and the Department of Agriculture wants American farmers to get involved
12 votes -
Why Thomas Jefferson meticulously monitored the weather wherever he went
8 votes -
Breakfast for eight billion
7 votes -
US indoor marijuana grow operations are consuming a staggering amount of energy
12 votes -
A forgotten farming technique - planting trap crops to fight pests - is making a big comeback – here’s why
21 votes -
‘The dead zone is real’: why US farmers are embracing wildflowers
34 votes -
Setting the record straight on Ukraine’s grain exports
9 votes -
Why the Soviet Union was obsessed with corn
12 votes -
In a first, Arizona’s attorney general sues an industrial farm over its water use
26 votes -
Making farming better for bees: can we breed crops that produce more nectar and pollen?
4 votes -
How guayule, a small shrub, could help the US rubber industry
12 votes -
In the US, regenerative farming practices require unlearning past advice
19 votes -
Advanced technology discovered under Neolithic dwelling in Denmark – a stone paved root cellar, which could represent a remarkable technological leap in resource preservation
14 votes -
How Japanese square watermelons are made
7 votes -
Large wildfires choke 60% of Brazil and large chunks of neighboring countries in smoke
17 votes -
Bat loss linked to death of human infants
27 votes -
Heat-treated seeds could offer farmers a chemical-free solution for pest control – following success in Sweden and Norway, ThermoSeed looks to expansion into Asia
14 votes -
Icelandic supermarkets have been left in a pickle, after a viral TikTok trend saw an unprecedented surge in demand for cucumbers
7 votes -
The banana apocalypse is coming. Can we stop it this time?
25 votes -
Brazilian rancher ordered to pay $50m for damage to Amazon
38 votes -
Danish insect farm sets sights on feeding Europe's livestock – Enorm intends to produce more than 10,000 tonnes of insect meal and oil a year
23 votes -
‘Goldmine’ collection of wheat from 100 years ago may help feed the world, scientists say
25 votes