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Pick your poison A
fable for tomorrow Petrified
forests Crossed
bills and broken eggs Kicking
the chemical habit
A
is for apple, P is for pesticide
Organic
matters |
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FROM
THIS MONTH'S EDITOR |
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It would be fair to say that this magazine has changed my life. Or at least my eating habits. The more I learned about pesticides, the more I determined that my family and I would eat as few of them as possible. So for starters, I've joined the nearest 'box' scheme. Local organic vegetables and fruit are delivered once a week to a central collection point, which for me is a house just around the corner. Every Thursday evening after work I walk around the block on the way home and pick up my cardboard box. The rest of our organic products we buy from the local supermarket which, thanks to the debates on genetically modified food, is stocking more and more organic food. But I was still surprised at the level of concern when I presented my ideas for this magazine to my NI colleagues one wet Wednesday morning. Which pesticides were used on our food? How come organic food is so expensive? Can organic farms feed the world?
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FRONT
COVER AND MAGAZINE DESIGNED BY ANDREW KOKOTKA.
ONLINE MAG MAINTAINED BY SIMON LOFFLER |
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I
have tried to answer some of their questions in this issue. And I'm sure you
will have more, because when it comes to what we eat we all have an opinion.
Which is why this ought to be a magazine that is close to our hearts - or
rather, our stomachs.
