The Truth About Farmers

Farmers use soil sampling to care for their land

Farmers rely heavily on the health of their soil, not just for a successful crop, but for the sustainability of their farm. Protecting the soil is an important part of being a good farmer.

Testing soil: One way to ensure that soil is healthy is to take soil samples.

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Taking soil samples: Farmers use a soil probe into the ground 4-8 inches to retrieve a core of soil. The sample is then put into a plastic bucket (metal or galvanized buckets may result in incorrect sample results). 12-15 cores of soil will need to be taken across the area being tested to get the most complete understanding of the soil. Once all the samples have been taken and mixed in a bucket, they will be packaged into special boxes to be sent to the N.C. Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services.

How often is soil sampled?: North Carolina hog farmers are required, by law, to take soil samples every three years, but many farmers take them annually.

What is being tested?: For hog farms, the main thing being tested is phosphorous levels and heavy metals like zinc and copper. The test also tells farmers the PH and nutrients of the soil. All this lets farmers know what the soil needs to grow crops (e.g. lime, fertilizer, etc.). Farmers only put enough nutrients on the field as can be absorbed to prevent run-off, reduce costs, and grow the best quality crops possible.

Soil is a farmer’s most precious asset, and they are deeply connected to it. Soil sampling is just one practice that farmers employ to protect the health of the land they care for.

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Kids Target of Anti-Hog Farm Messages

The billboards may be gone, and the lawsuits settled, but the fight for North Carolina pig farmers and our farming communities continues. Attacks continue, and now they are targeting your children.

It’s in college lectures, high school & elementary classrooms, and now even on major programming like Nickelodeon. As a part of an Earth Day segment, Nickelodeon highlighted the “environmental racism” and “pollution” that North Carolina hog farmers are inflicting. The network’s programming is primarily aimed at children 2-17, while some of its programs target the entire family.

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When it came to their segment on the atrocities of NC pig farms, we weren’t surprised to see names like Rick Dove, Waterkeepers Alliance, and Cape Fear River Watch in the credits.  

We say all this to bring awareness. Anti-agriculture activists are going beyond billboards, legislators, and lawsuits. They are targeting your kids.

As Parents, teachers and community members, we need to stay vigilant of the facts or “lack of facts” that are being fed to our children about agriculture.

The farm should not be portrayed as a place of pollution and mean-spirited, careless farmers. It should be highlighted as a place of innovation, career opportunities, and fellow families. Those who get to grow up on the farm, know just how many important lessons the farm can provide. That’s the message that should be shared to all kids—farms are good and important. They aren’t inherently bad.

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We are not just fighting misconceptions of where food comes from and what a farmer looks like. We are fighting against misconceptions about the very character and value of farms and farmers.

The youth of today hold the future of tomorrow. What will tomorrow look like for our farmers and our communities? Will the future be a generation who has been taught that farmers are a danger to our health and environment, or will it be a generation who stands up and preserves farms?

We’ve seen what happens when there is a disconnect between farmers and the public. Activists want to make that disconnect even greater by targeting the next generation of leaders and consumers.

Stay vigilant, friends. The billboards may have faded, but the attacks haven’t. They’ve just switched gears. Keep sharing the true story of farmers, especially to our young people.

Reliable Sources for Youth & Parents/Teachers:

 

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Truth, be damned: Demographics of who lives near NC hog farms

You’ve heard us say it many times before — repeat a lie often enough and people will believe it. The Fayetteville Observer is the latest media outlet to fall victim to spreading false allegations about North Carolina’s hog farms and the people who live near them with no regard for the facts.

In a recent story about the opposition to renewable natural gas projects, the Observer repeats a long-debunked claim from activist: that hog farms “are located in or around communities made up of mostly Black, Hispanic or Latino and Native American people."

It’s a claim that fits neatly into the narrative of environmental racism, but there’s one small problem: it’s simply not true.

The state’s four leading hog producing counties are Sampson, Duplin, Bladen and Wayne counties. Click on the links and take a look at the demographics of those communities. A majority of the population is white.

In Sampson and Duplin counties, the state’s two largest hog producing counties and the communities closest to the Align RNG project, white residents outnumber black residents by a margin of nearly 2-to-1. 

This data is consistent with a study commissioned several years ago by the NC Pork Council to examine the demographics around every permitted hog farm in the state. The study found that 68% of hog farms in North Carolina are in areas where black residents make up 30 percent or fewer of the population.

The chart below shows who lives near our hog farms:

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We shared this information with the reporter, to no avail. NC Farm Families will continue sharing the facts about our farms and highlighting the proven environmental benefits of biogas projects that reduce greenhouse gas emissions and general renewable energy.