Friday, September 22, 2006

Organic Cotton Baby Stuff!

You probably know that the Ecology Center stocks a fun selection of organic cotton t-shirts, but unless you’ve been in the store in the last few weeks, you don’t know about our great new selection of organic cotton baby stuff!

I’ve been looking for organic cotton baby items for years. At my last big trade show, I literally went around to every single baby vendor, and no one had anything organic. This month, the market is definitely booming. I have clothing coming in from seven different vendors – t-shirts, onesies, footies, many with matching hats, bibs and blankies. The sizes range from newborn to 4T, and I can order some styles in 6T. Just as exciting is a fantastic line of organic cotton stuffed animals. They’re adorable!

Switching from conventional to organic cotton products is one very important move for those of us looking to live more sustainable lives. Conventional cotton farming uses more insecticides than any other crop, and, according to the Pesticide Action Network North America (PANNA) “epitomizes the worst effects of chemically dependent agriculture” (Organic Cotton Breifing Kit, PANNA, http://www.panna.org).

Both the volume and the toxicity of pesticides used on cotton are particularly bad, many of the chemicals used on cotton were developed during WWII as chemical weapons – they’re nerve agents. While much of the world’s cotton is grown in the global south, pesticide intensive cotton growing is certainly not a removed problem. Also according to PANNA, in comparing pesticide linked illnesses of farm workers in California, conventional cotton is the third worst offender. In addition to purely chemical problems, Monsanto introduced Bt cotton, a genetically engineered plant in 1996. All of the strains of genetically modified cotton have had serious problems wherever they are grown, many actually showing signs of significantly lower resistance to pests and disease than non GM cotton varieties (Myers, Adrian, Organic Futures: The Case for Organic Farming).