Hog Fanning Summit (Continued from Page A 1) that the bora are well-cared for while providing families a liveli hood on the hum. The summit was sponsored by the Waterkeeper Alliance and featured Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., son of the late U.S. Attorney General and nephew of the late U.S. President John F. Kennedy, as keynote speaker. Other groups organizing die summit included the Pennsylvania Association for Sustainable Agriculture (PASA), Penn Future, White Dog Cafe Foundation, Global Resource Ac tion Center for the Environment (GRACE), Animal Welfare Insti tute, and Delaware Riverkeeper Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. of the Waterkeeper Alliance explain# Me goat of elimi nating large-scale, corpo rate hog farms. Barbara Determan, left, former president of the Nation al Pork Producers Council, and Kara Flynn, public rela tions specialist, say the pork industry has room for both confinement and open-air hog producers. S* N 1 IMPRO Network. Dozens spoke throughout the day on the various impacts of in dustrial hog operations and the legal issues surrounding them. A number of sessions also focused on the direct marketing of pas ture-raised pork. Paul Wulis of Willis Free Range Pig Farm in Thornton, lowa, spoke about his farm and marketing operation. Willis is manager of Niman Ranch Pork Company, which sells free-range pork through various outlets across the country. Willis uses outdoor farrowing pens on pasture and remodeled dairy freestall barns as winter housing. The sows and pigs for age during the growing season and are allowed mobility and ac cess to hay in the wintertime. Straw is used for indoor bedding. Niman Ranch Pork Company slaughters and processes about 2,000 hogs per week from more than 280 farms that supply it According to Willis, part of what makes the Niman Ranch enter prise successful is that the taste and eating quality of pastured pork is “dramatically different” from that of hogs raised in con finement That translates into higher-priced pork chops in stores and restaurants. “If we’re raising the best pigs, we’re going to ask the best price,” Willis sain. He added that some Niman Ranch cuts, such as shoulder, are not priced much Paul Willis of Niman Ranch shares pork market ing hints. above conventional choices. Helen Browning of the Wilt shire Downs in the south of Eng land shared her challenges and successes in starting the first or ganic pig operation in the United Kingdom (U.K.) She founded Eastbrook Farms Organic Meat in the late 1980 s on her father’s 1,300-acre farm, with the goal of developing a large-scale pastur ed-pork enterprise. Browning raises pigs on red and white clover pastures and markets organic pork across the U.K. For sows, she prefers a cross between the Duroc and British Saddleback breeds for good mothering ability as well as meat production. Pigs are used as part of “a whole farm system,” she said. Clover fields reduced to dirt by aggressively foraging pigs are then rotated into crops, including com, potatoes, and wheat. It has taken time for Brdwning to develop a steady wholesale customer base in the U.K. Her marketing plan is constantly up dated in otdfr to sett pork from the 600 hogs slaughtered for her markets. - per week, including some froanQther farms. * . “We'vbhad to work ycryliard to market' our products,” Brown ing said. “Over the years, I sup pose we*ve had a go at most forms of direct marketing. It’s been a hair-raising ride.” About five years ago, Brown ing’s business “did a complete turnaround,” she said, when she began offered branded products for supermarkets. Beside selling to supermarkets and restaurants, Browning also offers overnight courier delivery of pork products to homes across the U.K. Creating a consumer base is prerequisite to selling products raised in alternative farming sys tems, according to Browning, “We can only change the way Contract hog producers attending the summit included, from left, Nate Richard, Caressa Crone, and Craig Richard (father of Nate). The Crone and Richard families say their hog operations have been well-accepted in their commu nities. we farm when we change the way the consumer shops,” she said. Among those peaking on the adverse effects of industrial hog operations was Dr. John Ikerd, a retired ag economist from the University of Missouri. He spends much of his time writing and speaking about ag sustaina bility issues. Ikerd focused on the impact of corporate livestock operations on rural communities, calling them a form of “colonization” similar to the kind that displaced native cultures throughout history. “These agribusiness corpora tions are basically colonizing rural America,” Ikerd said. “We see communities that are losing control over the local econonomy, culture, and government.” Promises that contract live stock operations will bring -eco nomic prosperity to rural com munities are hollow, according to Ikerd. “The money flows out of the community,” he said. “We ace those areas still economically de pressed.” Throughout the day, numerous references were made to the con centration of hogs on the coastal plain of North Carolina and the environmental impacts on water ways and quality of life in the re gion. A whirlwind of bad publici ty for the North Carolina hog industry came to a head in 1999 when Hurricane Floyd flooded the area, causing manure pits to overflow into streams and rivers and dead hogs to float atop of the floodwaters. A key point made by critics of the North Carolina hog industry is that manure there is not view ed as fertilizer, but as a waste product that is spread simply in order to get rid of it. That, they say, has resulted in illegal spread ing practices that wreak havoc on the environment. HEATMOR Stainless Steel Outdoor Wood Furnaces Safe - Etonomlcal & Convenient -Insurable • Over/Under Injection Air Sraft • Modular Construction •» Extra insulating features • Burns Wood, Coal, Oil, Corn • Semi-closed loop • Rust Controlled *Expandable Low-Pressure Bladder Lowest Prices on Heatmor Outdoor Furnaces Dealer for Taylor Outdoor Waterstoves - Hannon Stove Systems Dealer Wood, Coal, Pellet, Corn, Gas & Oil Stoves Many Brands In Stock Kegerreis Stoves “since 1980” 142 W. Bah WwMlsdort, M 19867 610-589-2981 Lancaster Farming, Saturday, June 14, 2003-A2l Helen Browning of Eng land talke about her chal lenges and successes mar keting organic, pasture raised pork in the United Kingdom. According to keynote speaker Kennedy, “In Pennsylvania, that hasn’t happened yet, but it’s going to.” As president of the New York City-based Waterkeeper’s Alli ance, Kennedy has been at work bringing lawsuits against cor porations that pollute. Doug Goodlander, director of the State Conservation Commis sion Nutrient Management Pro gram, said that Pennsylvania’s Nutrient Management Act is de signed to prevent problems like those in North Carolina. “North Carolina had a poor regulatory system,” Goodlander said. “I think we do a good job watching over our water quality here.” Goodlander noted that local conservation districts throughout Pennsylvania are “the eyes and ears” of the ment system. Jim Brubaker, re sponded to some of the fileas put forth by conference speakers. Brubaker, along with his daughter and son-in-law, finishes hogs through contracts with Hostetter Manage ment and Hatfield in three bams with a total capacity for 6,300 head. “I’m not sure they re ally have correct inform ation about what is hap- (Turn to Page A 22) B & R CATTLE CO RD 1, Marietta PA 17547 Office Phone: 717*653*8164 Specializing in Stockers & Feeders JOHN BOWMAN 717*653*5728 RON RANCK 717*656*9849