thewanderingwise1
Kava Curious
That would be see awesome , I was just assuming it was because what ive heard about the quality, but it would be good to know for sure.specially because when get my friends to try it they'll wanna kno forsure
Hi, I am so sorry for the late reply. I am not certified organic, there are only 2 farms that are certified organic for kava Pinner creek organics and Puu O Hoku Ranch.That would be see awesome , I was just assuming it was because what ive heard about the quality, but it would be good to know for sure.specially because when get my friends to try it they'll wanna kno forsure
Thanks Chris, im satisfied. I worked on a farm over the summer doing the same.basically switching to organic but from what they said you have to be growing organic for a few years to get certified or something along those lines just curious but is that the situation your in?Hi, I am so sorry for the late reply. I am not certified organic, there are only 2 farms that are certified organic for kava Pinner creek organics and Puu O Hoku Ranch.
That being said, I do not use any poisons and I do not use chemical fertilizers. Please let me know if you have any other questions, aloha.
Chris
I'm sure it's different in Hawaii, but elsewhere in the Pacific... you need dollars... tens of thousands of themwhen you get a chance, could you explain what is needed to be "certified".
In the developed world, this isn't true. I the US, I believe you need to be certified by an organisation accredited by the USDA. I'm not sure what the process is like in the US.Out of curiosity, what does certification require. To my understanding, there're no universally accepted "organic" farming practices and in fact you can claim "organic" without doing much. Is that not true?
That's correct, and it's a good thing. Protecting words and names is the only way to ensure that customers aren't lied to about the products they're consuming. There are sellers of tudei kava right now calling their kava noble. The only thing consumers can do is rely on third parties (eg. True Kava Labs) to certify that kava is noble. We'll never be able to protect the term "noble" as used with kava, and that illustrates one of the benefits of protecting the word "organic".I feel like organic is almost trademarked in a sense and you can use things like "cultivated without chemicals" or "wildcrafted" but to say organic you have to go through certification process. I was at a farmers market in MS and the farmers made a big deal about how they have to be careful about the terminology.