Beginning Farmer and Ranchers Development Program
Kohala Center
NOTES from class on July 20, 2019 by Jim Crum
Presentations by Maile Woodhall (for registered students):
Part 1
Part 2

Maile Woodhall, Kohala Center
Organic certification and record keeping
Mwoodhall@kohalacenter.org
808-640-0177
– business planning
– certifications
– USDA auditor and inspector

Organic Certification
– in 2000 it became federal program
– organic certification agencies are accredited by USDA but are not part of the federal government
– exempt if making less than $5000 gross they can claim they are organic

Farm is the first step in Organic
What can be certified?
– orchard
-Row crop
– Perrienial
– Greenhouse
– Hydroponic
Types
– all organic
– split different crops
– parallel dame or similar crops
Can do just a portion

Standards: different if dealing with different countries Annual inspection required

Must have land with 36 months without use if prohibited substances (new land owners have to show history for first 3 years)

3 agencies that certify on HI
organiccertifiers.com
ics-intl.com
ccof.org
Note who it is certified by on the label
Under 10 acres = $800 fee

Organic System Plan- document your organic strategy
Land: have distinct and defined boundaries and buffer zones ($25ft is standard) 
Soil: biological – cover crops, compost, animal products.
Physical – ground rock, like phosphate and greensand.
Cultural – rotations, legumes, contour plowing. Batch sampling of manure from outside sources. 

Manure: – without manure: mulch, green waste, plant manure- with raw manure: initial C:N between 25:1 and 40:1— static pile: 131-170 degrees for 3 days— windrow: 131-170 for 15 days, turned at least 5 times— edible portion no contact for 120 days before harvest, any is no soil contact for 90 days before harvest

Pest management: can use Neem, etc. use these
– Perennial peanut (weeds)
– Chicken tractors (pests)
– Organic hay (weeds)
– Shade cloth (pests and weeds)

Disease management
– clean equipment and greenhouse
– crop rotation to break disease cycles
– good drainage and water management and air flow

If using inputs, keep records on
– soil testing
– preventative practices
– collect MSDS labels
– keep receipts
– document dates of input
– proper storage of materials: locked, ventilated, dry chemicals are above the liquid

Can’t have treated fence posts installed. 
Use “Eco friendly” brand paint for treated surfaces. 

Review of substances to ensure products are organic- OMRI- WSDA

If you are unable to source organic seeds, document 3 attempts, and you can get non-organic. Non-GMO tho’. 

You need to implement and document your crop rotation plan. You can use the same crop as long as a different variety

Water: not an issue if no well or sharing of tank. Test 4x/yr for 126ppm or less generic E. coli per ml. Ag water otherwise exempt. Post harvest must be potable water.
Testing labs: microbiology consulting services in Kona 808-345-6549, Pololei Labs in Hilo 808-938-0569. 
?1oz bleach/1000gal per week?

Harvest: clean containers, common sense. Remove from field ASAP. Post harvest: what sanitizers, rinse water additives, pest control, 
DOCUMENT, DOCUMENT, DOCUMENT.

*USDA NRCS – handout about what grows where well*A place for quick questions. Forum for questions. * share with all of the grads