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   Our Mission:
Profeta Farms’ mission is to improve the health of our community by growing a variety of foods using common-sense organic farming practices, resulting in nutrient-dense foods, and to provide high- quality foods to the community through a single local, organic, responsible source.
THE NEXT TIME YOU ORDER A STEAK, THINK OF THIS BLOG:
The “Feedlot” Model Of Beef Production
On certified organic farms, beef cattle, dairy cattle and swine are rotated on fields planted with cover crops. The animals’ manure droppings help build nutrients for row crops in succeeding rotations. Beef cattle raised
in this model are pasture raised and finished for slaughter on site. What is critical to understand is that there is no aspect of the model that overpowers the environment. The cover crops are putting much-needed nutrients back into the ground. The nitrogen and other ingredients from the cows’ manure helps the ground become biologically
alive and enriched with insects, microbes, and worms. The cows’ manure does not overpower the pasture but rather enriches it. In this way, the crops, the ground, and the cattle live in an environmental harmony, each enriching the other and making our food more healthy.
An article written by Mr. Bob Martin1 who is the Director of Food System Policy Program at Johns Hopkins University’s Center for a Livable Future, found the following:
In the industrial feedlot model, where animals are segregated in crowded, inhumane areas that are often paved
in order to make manure collection by backhoe more efficient, the intensive presence of so many cattle in one location overpowers the environment and creates a toxic situation. Animals are pumped
Given the known pollution and soil degradation, the health threats and the high use of limited resources that are inherently part of the feedlot system, it is clear that this production model harms the environment and demands reform.
At Profeta Farms, we practice regenerative farming6 – an approach to food and farming systems that regenerates7 topsoil and increases biodiversity8 now and long into the future. The way we graze our livestock, and the manner in which we carefully
plan our agricultural cycles reduces waste to almost zero, enhances the ecosystem, increases soil resilience and strengthens the health and vitality of our farm naturally, and without the use of chemical pesticides and fertilizers.
I invite you to visit our farm and to learn more about humane beef production and regenerative agriculture.
Paul Profeta
Paul V. Profeta is a visionary who co- founded of Profeta Farms along with his wife, certified Integrative Nutrition Coach Joanne Malino. A serial entrepreneur and successful businessman, Paul became focused on our food supply and the contaminants therein. Eventually, Paul and Joanne decided that America had to change the way it fed itself, and Profeta Farms was born. Committed to growing, raising and selling delicious food that is healthier for our customers and for the environment, Profeta Farms caters to customers who want organic produce, meats, eggs and prepared foods that are fresher, healthier and more flavorful than food from conventional grocery stores or other markets.
1. https://clf.jhsph.edu
2. https://www.wsj.com/articles/is-feedlot-beef-bad-for-the- environment-1436757037
3. https://time.com/3763002/antibiotic-resistant-bacteria- airborne-antimicrobial-resistance-cattle-yards/\4. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17384784
4. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17384784
5. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eutrophication
6. https://regenerationinternational.org/2017/02/24/what- is-regenerative-agriculture/
7. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil_regeneration 8. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biodiversity
Food Beyond Organic
unnaturally with hormones and also inoculated heavily with antibiotics because their environment is so unhealthy it is necessary to medicate them to keep them from getting sick and dying.
What is critically missing from the industrial feedlot model is the well-balanced ecology of the organic farming model. In the industrial feedlot, the manure is collected in massive amounts, and the feedlot operator tries to dispose of it in the least harmful and most economical way possible. Unfortunately, the feedlot waste releases harmful gasses such as methane, hydrogen sulfite, and ammonia. The EPA estimates that as much as 85% of the total manmade ammonia volatilization in the US comes from animal agriculture. Airborne ammonia contributes to haze and poses serious health threats to human beings, including respiratory distress, cardiovascular disease, lung disease, and even death. The EPA thinks that ammonia emissions from feedlots in the Midwest may be the cause of the “dead zone” in the Gulf of Mexico2.
In addition, the antibiotics that the animals are being bombed with end up in the
meat that we eat, making us eventually resistant to the efficacy of those antibiotics. What is worse is that we are creating a culture of antibiotic resistant bacteria
that our medical practitioners are finding hard to combat. Texas Tech researchers found3 antibiotic resistant bacteria in particulate matter downwind from feedlots in Texas. Because of the dry, windy conditions in other states, they projected that Kansas, Oklahoma, and Colorado all suffer from the same problem.
These feedlots also create pollution when there is runoff from the manure mountains. In 2007, scientists at North Carolina State found that “generally accepted livestock waste management practices do not adequately or effectively protect water resources4 from contamination with excessive nutrients, microbial pathogens, and pharmaceuticals present in the waste.” Excessive nutrient runoff has contributed
to water eutrophication5 – (an excessive concentration of nutrients) – in western Lake Erie, the Chesapeake Bay, and the Gulf of Mexico.
  



































































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