logo-tilt.gifI foresee a time, perhaps five to ten years into the future, when everyone will have access to raw milk—perhaps some at farms, but many at local stores.

Those of us who have been involved one way or another in the stings and harassment of the last few years will shake our heads and wonder, every time we purchase raw milk, why things were once so difficult.

What prompts this vision? (No, I haven’t been smoking anything.)

First off, I was referred by a reader of my article about the recent harassment of raw milk producers in New York to an intriguing web site: “Raw USA Standards: Quality, Purity, and Ethics in Raw Milk Production”, complete with a seal. Interesting idea. Kind of a Good Housekeeping seal of approval.

The list of twenty conditions and standards necessary for “the RAW USA Raw Milk Certification” includes a prohibition of antibiotics and hormones, along with a requirement that the cows “be allowed access to pasture 150 days per year at a minimum…”

There are standards for most food and other commercial products we purchase, so why not for raw milk?

It turns out these standards were developed by Mark McAfee, the owner of Organic Pastures Dairy Co.…some two years ago. He told me he’s not been able to promote the active use of these standards—he’s had various battles to fight in growing his own 300-cow dairy—but, “These are the standards we use.” He foresees the day when they, or some variation, will govern the wide availability of raw milk.

The fact that these standards are already being applied in California prompts the second reason for my vision. Major trends tend to start in California, and work their way east. McAfee’s 300 cows currently provide raw milk to an estimated 35,000 California consumers via stores throughout California, and his business is growing at close to 25% annually.

Finally, there is a great deal more interest in raw milk today than there was just a couple of years ago. Ask any farmer who produces raw milk—with little or no marketing, most are quickly inundated with customers. Ironically, the crude assaults on raw-milk dairy farmers by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) and its state lackeys has probably had the unintended effect of spreading the word about the benefits of raw milk. Too many people have come to appreciate that if the government doesn’t want us to have certain nutritional product, the real reason likely has to do with objections by monied interests, rather than any serious problem with the product.

The main down side I see to this vision is that any kind of major new market will inevitably attract big-money interests. Raw milk hedge funds? Don’t laugh. Maybe with some grass-fed cattle and chickens for diversification.

In the meantime, McAfee says consumers don’t have to wait for some day in the distant future to see his quality standards applied. “When they go to a farm to purchase raw milk, they can take it along as a check list.” In other words, use it as a guide to question the farmer whose milk you’re considering purchasing. He or she may not do everything on the list, but at least you can make an informed decision as to whether enough is being done to produce a safe product.

***

I was intrigued by the various recollections from older people about farm life—and especially about a seeming reluctance to discuss the old foods and practices. I used to encounter a similar sense from my mother-in-law, who grew up on a farm in Germany. I think there is a tendency in our culture, developed over the last 60 or 70 years, to view farmers as backwards, as “hicks” and “hillbillies.”

In the old days, you were modern and forward-thinking once you substituted oil heat for woodburning stoves, flush toilets for outhouses, canned vegetables for the real stuff, and pasteurized milk for raw milk. Now, when we inquire about what it was like to grow up with raw milk, or without electricity, there is fear on some level that they’ll be viewed as hicks…and disbelief that we really could be genuinely interested. They must be thinking, what goes around comes around.