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Wood
Prairie Farm
In This
Issue of The Seed Piece:
Seed
Piece Newsletter
Special Offer: FREE Organic Oat Pea Cover Crop
Seed.
Organic
News
and
Commentary
Update. Family Farmers Defend Their Right.

Oat-Pea
Cover Crop, nine weeks after planting. Beyond oat-pea are newly
planted strawberries, and beyond them a field of seed potatoes
on Maine's Wood Prairie Farm.
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Special Offer: FREE Organic Oat Pea
Cover Crop Seed.
Oats and peas have both
enjoyed the wet weather of June and the rains we’ve had more recently
after our short early July dry spell. Oat-Pea Mix is an effective cover
crop. The stiff oats lend trellis-like
support to the frilly and floppy peas. The peas in turn, being a
legume, convert atmospheric nitrogen into plant available food for both
themselves and the oats via nitrogen fixation on their roots.
We’ve decided to offer you a
brand new product: Organic
Oat-Pea Cover Crop Mix. We’ve
blended the two great cover crops together for an unbeatable
soil-saving combination in just the right ratio for maximum biomass
growth. Keep an extra bag or two on hand and as soon as you harvest a
corner of the garden broadcast some on the area by hand at a rate of
one pound mix per 200 square feet. Use the back side of a steel rake to
quickly cover over the seed with soil and your work is done.
Here’s your chance to earn a
FREE 2.5 lbs
bag of Organic Oat-Pea Cover Crop Mix ($9.95 value) with your next
purchase of $45 or more. Please use Promo Code WPF 1029. FREE
Organic Oat-Pea Cover Crop Mix must ship with your order. Offer ends
Wednesday August 17, 2011. Please call or click today! Jim & Megan
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Update. Organic Family Farmers
Defend Their Right to Protect Themselves From Monsanto Patents.
NEW
YORK - August 11, 2011 – The eighty-three family farmers, small and
family owned seed businesses, and agricultural organizations
challenging Monsanto's patents on genetically modified seed filed
papers in federal court today defending their right to seek legal
protection from the threat of being sued by Monsanto for patent
infringement should they ever become contaminated by Monsanto's
genetically modified seed. The Public Patent Foundation (PUBPAT)
represents the plaintiffs in the suit, titled Organic Seed Growers
& Trade Association (OSGATA), et al. v. Monsanto and pending in
the Southern District of New York. Today's filings respond to a
motion filed by Monsanto in mid-July to have the case dismissed.
“Rather than give a straight forward
answer on whether they would sue our clients for patent infringement if
they are ever contaminated by Monsanto's transgenic seed, Monsanto has
instead chosen to try to deny our clients the right to receive legal
protection from the courts,” said Dan Ravicher, PUBPAT's Executive
Director. “Today's filings include sworn statements by several of
the plaintiffs themselves explaining to the court how the risk of
contamination by transgenic seed is real and why they cannot trust
Monsanto to not use an occurrence of contamination as a basis to accuse
them of patent infringement.”
The
legal brief filed by our lawyer asserts, “This case is about real farmers and real
seed businesses who wish to use and distribute organic and conventional
seed, but who are at substantial immediate risk of being contaminated
by Monsanto's transgenic seed and then sued by Monsanto for patent
infringement. It is no mere policy disagreement seeking an advisory
opinion on hypothetical facts. Monsanto has undertaken one of the most
aggressive patent assertion campaigns in history, including asserting
its patents on transgenic seed against parties who, like Plaintiffs,
never wanted to use or distribute such seed. As a result, each of the
Plaintiffs is under constant fear of being contaminated by Monsanto's
transgenic seed and then sued by Monsanto for patent infringement. This
fear is so severe for some of the Plaintiffs that they are completely
forgoing growing certain crops that they easily could grow and would
like to grow…
“Viewing all
the circumstances in this case in the light of the purpose of the
Declaratory Judgment Act shows that Plaintiffs indeed have standing and
that Defendants' motion lacks merit. Monsanto could easily make this
case disappear by providing Plaintiffs a simple covenant not to sue. It
would take no more than a single sentence on a single piece of paper
and a single stroke of the pen. Monsanto's failure to do so speaks
louder than any stack of papers ever could. As such, Plaintiffs
respectfully request that Monsanto's motion be denied.”
Plaintiffs Bryce
Stephens, who farms in Kansas, Frederick Kirschenmann, who farms in
North Dakota, C.R. Lawn, who is founder and co-owner of Fedco Seeds in
Maine, Don Patterson of Virginia, and Chuck Noble, who farms in South
Dakota, each submitted declarations to the court describing their
personal experiences with the risk of contamination by genetically
modified seed and why those experiences have forced them to bring the
current suit asking the court to declare that Monsanto could never sue
them for patent infringement if they were ever contaminated by
Monsanto's GMO seed. As summarized by the accompanying brief
filed by PUBPAT on the plaintiffs' behalf, “Monsanto's acts of
widespread patent assertion and plaintiffs' ever growing risk of
contamination create a real, immediate and substantial dispute between
them.”
Twelve
agricultural organizations also filed a
friend-of-the-court amici brief supporting the right of the
plaintiffs to bring the case. In their brief, the amici describe
some of the harmful effects of genetically modified seed and how easily
GMOs can contaminate an organic or conventional farmer's land.
The organizations filing the amici brief were Farm and Ranch Freedom
Alliance, Biodynamic Farming and Gardening Association, Carolina Farm
Stewardship Association, Ecological Farmers of Ontario, Fair Food
Matters, International Organic Inspectors Association, Michigan Land
Trustees, Natural Environment Ecological Management, Nebraska
Sustainable Agriculture Society, Organic Council of Ontario, Slow Food
USA, and Virginia Independent Consumers and Farmers Association.
The excellent and powerful amicii brief
begins, “This case presents several
issues of first impression, and the outcome will have repercussions for
almost every American. While the Plaintiffs are at the most immediate
risk of suit for
patent infringement by Monsanto, the legal principles involved in this
Court’s decision will have
even broader ramifications…. And,
ultimately, almost every
American consumer somehow makes use of products made from corn,
soybeans, canola, sugar beets, or cotton, all of which may
implicate the scope and enforceability of Monsanto’s patents. The entire food
chain is impacted by
the spread of Monsanto’s patented crops….
“Given
the difficulties in minimizing GM contamination, farmers must make
numerous decisions about which steps are worthwhile for them and which
steps are not. They are not able to make these decisions
based on their own and their customers’ interests, but must instead make these
decisions with the threat of litigation against a giant corporation
looming over their heads. The constant threat of a patent infringement
suit by Monsanto creates significant, unquantifiable costs for the
Plaintiff farmers and similarly situated farmers. Unless this Court
allows this case to proceed, the Plaintiff farmers will face the choice
of abandoning growing such crops or risking prosecution whenever
Monsanto chooses.
“Monsanto’s
motion to dismiss notes that its patented technology is self-replicating...
Yet Monsanto wants the court to ignore the real-world repercussions of
this fact. Monsanto seeks to reap all of the benefits of a patented
seed – particularly
the necessity for farmers to buy their products year after year
indefinitely, since new seed is needed every single year – but to take
no responsibility for the reality that its technology, by its very
nature, induces others to infringe…
“This problem is of Monsanto’s
making. By developing a product that is self-replicating, and then marketing
it to farmers across the country, Monsanto has ensured that no farmer
can entirely avoid infringing. Monsanto has chosen to exploit this
problem by an aggressive pattern of enforcement that has left farmers
across the country in fear of an enforcement lawsuit even if they have
no desire or intent to use the patented seeds. These farmers are placed
in the position of abandoning growing valuable crops or investing
significant time and effort in protective measures to try to minimize
contamination. In the latter case, no matter what measures they take,
the farmers still face the threat of a patent infringement lawsuit
because of the impossibility of remaining completely GM-free. It is
critical for both these farmers and for all the parties involved in the
food chain, including the Amici, that this Court consider this case and
provide a clear declaration of their rights.”
Jim is
President of lead
plaintiff Organic Seed Growers and Trade Association. Bryce Stephens is
OSGATA Vice-President and Fedco Seeds is one of our OSGATA member
companies. We have
studied Monsanto’s litigation playbook and accordingly, their action
which seeks to deny us our day in court comes as little surprise. It is anticipated that the judge will rule on
Monsanto’s motion to dismiss in September and we will certainly
continue to keep you and the organic community informed about this
monumental case. Jim & Megan
The brief filed by the plaintiffs in opposition to Monsanto's motion to
dismiss is available
here.
The amici brief filed in
support of the plaintiffs is available
here
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Fresh Blueberry Muffins
Photo
by Angela Wotton
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Recipe: Fresh
Blueberry Muffins.
1 1/3 c whole wheat flour
3/4 rolled oats
1/3 sugar
2 tsp baking
powder
1/4 tsp sea
salt
1 beaten egg
3/4 c milk
1/4 c cooking oil
3/4 c
fresh or frozen blueberries
Combine flour,
oats, sugar, baking
powder and salt in a medium bowl. Make a well in center of flour
mixture.
In another bowl
combine egg, milk
and oil. Add egg mixture all at once to flour mixture. Stir just until
moistened. Fold blueberries into batter.
Spoon batter
into buttered muffin
cups, filling each two-thirds full. Bake in 400 degree oven for 18 to
20
minutes or until golden and a wooden toothpick inserted in centers
comes out
clean.
Makes 12 muffins
Wonderful warm!
Megan
Source: Better
Homes and Gardens
Cookbook, 12th Edition
Click Here for our Wood Prairie Organic Grain Section
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Wood Prairie Farm Quick
Links
Jim
& Megan Gerritsen
Wood
Prairie Farm
49
Kinney Road
Bridgewater,
Maine 04735
(800)829-9765
Certified Organic, Direct from the Farm
www.woodprairie.com
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