There are far more than five reasons why you should eat organic. But these are our top five reasons why eating organic benefits you.
1) Because leaving out the bad stuff makes more room for the good stuff. Research shows that organic foods are higher in antioxidants and other nutrients, like omega-3 and CLA essential fatty acids. And organic crops have been shown to contain significantly less concentrations of cadmium—a toxic metal on par with lead and mercury. Heavy metals are found in phosphate-based fertilizers, used in standard conventional farming practices. Organic food really is better for you. And it tastes better too.
2) Chemicals are bad for you. Organic farmers use sustainable methods of pest-control. Non-organic farms use toxic pesticides and herbicides. These chemicals are really harmful to wildlife and human health, contaminating our food, air, and water, and accumulating in our cells. Organic farming practices, however, strictly forbids the use of these chemicals—making bees happier and food more nutritious.
3) Because our animals and kids should grow at their own pace. Synthetic hormones and antibiotics are frequently given to non-organic farm animals to change their reproductive cycles and speed up their growth. We believe animals are healthiest and happiest when they’re allowed to live without being pumped full of chemicals—it helps them produce the highest quality meat and eggs we pride ourselves on.
4) Because antibiotic-resistant infections are very real. When non-organic farmers feed their animals antibiotics to keep them from getting sick, they kill many of the pathogens—but not all of them. The germs that survive go on to reproduce, leading to antibiotic-resistant infections that pose a real threat to animals and people alike. Instead of relying on antibiotics, our organic farmers use natural holistic measures to promote and maintain animal health—keeping everyone healthier in the process.
5) Because we’ve all heard “GMOs are bad,” but do you know why? That’s because genetically engineered crops are a relatively recent invention with potentially harmful impacts on the ecosystem and on human and animal health. We still don’t know a lot about them and organic standards forbid the use of genetically engineered seeds or animals—including clones. We like science as much as anybody likes science, especially when it’s used to the benefit of all, and to the harm of none. We have yet to see a GMO that fits this description.