This cheap self made system seems okay but have not tried it to report on its effectiveness.
Agriculture Bible Campsite
Tuesday, August 2, 2016
Homemade Drip Irrigation
This cheap self made system seems okay but have not tried it to report on its effectiveness.
Monday, December 17, 2012
Friday, December 14, 2012
Operation Record Keeping Systems
ORGANIC VEGETABLE OPERATION RECORD KEEPING SYSTEMS*
*Forms developed by James A. Riddle and Joyce E. Ford for the Carolina Farm Stewardship Association. All forms designed to comply with the requirements of the USDA’s National Organic Program.
The National Organic Program's (NOP) Organic Rule §205.103 states that "a certified operation must maintain records for production, harvesting and handling of organic agricultural products…". These records must "be adapted to the particular business that the certified operation is conducting; fully disclose all activities and transactions of the certified operation in sufficient detail as to be readily understood and audited; be maintained for not less than 5 years; and be sufficient to demonstrate compliance" with the Final Organic Rule itself. These records must be "available for inspection and copying during normal business hours" by the organic inspector or other authorized representatives.
Because vegetable operations vary widely in the types of crops grown, amount of acreage, number and size of fields in production, and marketing through farmers markets, on-farm stands, CSA and/or wholesale, it is difficult to create a template or system that fits all types of certified organic vegetable operations. The record keeping system presented below attempts to walk organic vegetable growers through recordkeeping options to develop systems of records pertinent to their specific operations. The requirements for each type of record are given and an example of that type of record is shown.
Vegetable farm records that meet NOP requirements can be grouped into the following categories:
1. Farm and field maps
2. Field history sheets
3. Seed purchase records
4. Input records (soil amendments, foliar sprays, pest control products, compost production record)
5. Activity logs
6. Harvest records
7. Storage records
8. Lot numbering system for wholesale sales
9. Sales records
10. Other records
The operation’s record keeping system must be sufficient to be "readily understood and audited". In other words, the ability must exist to trace each crop from field to harvest, storage and sales, including the application of soil amendments, pest or disease control products, and other inputs. You need to be able to track crops to your farm or fields and show how they were grown. The records specifically relating to “audit trail” for your operation are field history sheets, harvest, storage and sales records, (including a lot number for operations that sell wholesale, if applicable). Other records listed above verify compliance of specific standards in the rule, such as the use of organic seeds.
Not every operation needs all of the records listed above. As a certified organic producer, you need to determine which types of records you need, so that your records are “adapted to your operation” and "disclose your activities and transactions".
General Tips:
1. Develop generic record templates, typing or writing as much information as possible, so that you need only check a column, write in a date, or record an amount.
2. Keep the records relevant and simple. They should be useful to you in making management decisions as well as showing compliance to the Organic Rule.
3. Keep the record in a location that is accessible to use. For example, keep the cooler log outside the cooler door. When you put vegetables into the cooler or take them out, it is easy to quickly check the amounts and date.
4. Keep records up to date. It is much harder to go back and reconstruct records after the fact.
5. At the end of the year or season, gather all records from clipboards and file them in a ring binder.
6. Review last year’s records when making plans for the coming season.
7. Modify or improve your records over time. Discard useless records and incorporate new ones.
STEP 1: Develop or draw a farm map. Start with an FSA, NRCS, plat map, surveyors map, or hand or computer drawn map of your farm or fields. Mark all fields, roads, and adjoining land uses such as conventional fields, pastures or neighboring residences. Indicate locations of wild areas such as woodlands, beneficial habitat areas, and other landmarks. Mark on the map areas where you maintain permanent waterways, windbreaks, retention ponds, buffer zones, or other landmarks. Each field or plot should be numbered. Show relevant farm buildings. Indicate which direction is "North". The size or acreage can be added if there is room. Boundaries should be clearly delineated. See Sample # 1.
Tips:
1. Do not use color markers, as these maps are copied and the colors do not show when copied.
2. Do not show individual annual crops on this general farm map. Annual crops change from year to year.
3. Minimize changing field acreages and field numbers from year to year.
Sample 1: Wiscoy Organic Produce Farm Map
Neighbor's conventional fields
30' treeline buffer
Field #1 – 1 acre Field #2 – 1 acre
N
Greenhouse #1
Equip
storage
Crop
dry storage
Garage
Greenhouse #2
Packing shed / Cooler
House
County road – not sprayed
Neighbor's Woodland
Driveway
Apple/Pear Orchard - 50 trees
STEP 2: Develop field history sheets. You may be required to use the field history sheets provided by the certifying agent as part of the Organic Farm Plan questionnaire. The certifier’s forms may prove difficult to use as they are often designed for fields where single crops are grown. Because they are filled out prior to planting, the Field History Sheet attached to your Organic Farm Plan application may not be totally accurate. The certifying agent's field history sheet can be filled out with general categories of vegetable crops, such as brassicas, sweet corn, greens, or alliums, listing all soil amendment and/or pest or disease control inputs used on that field. This record is used by the inspector to verify that the crops you actually plant correspond to the crops you stated in the Organic Farm Plan. It is also used to determine the actual crops and fields you are requesting for certification, the year of organic eligibility for new fields, and to assess your crop rotation and soil fertility program.
Sample 2a: Field History Sheet in your Organic Farm Plan Questionnaire
Year: 2003
Field #
O-Organic
T-Transitional
C-Conventional
Acreage
Crops
Inputs
Input Date of Use Rate of Use
Expected Yield
#1
O
1.0
Mixed vegetables
Cow manure
Lime
11/03
50 lb/600 sq. ft.
25 lb/600 sq.ft.
Variable
#2
O
.75
.25
Sweet corn
Squash
Cow manure
Lime
11/03
1 ton/acre
Variable
Orchard
O
50 trees
25 Pear and 25 Apple
Cow manure
11/03
200 lb/acre
250 bushels
If you grow multiple types of crops in a single field, a good way to track crops grown is to draw an individual field map for each field, delineating plots, rows or beds. Number each plot, row or bed. An example of a numbering system is Field #1-1, #1-2, #1-3, Field #2-1, #2-2, #2-3, etc, where a 1-acre field is divided into plots and then into beds. All plots or beds growing the same crops and receiving the same inputs can be tracked together, rather than tracking every plot or bed separately.
Once you have designed the blank template map, make copies. This detailed field record, showing plots, rows or beds, is your key to a simple record keeping system. The template can be used as an activity log showing dates of plantings; as an input use record showing applications of foliar sprays, pest or disease control products, and soil amendments, as a harvest record. Record the activity or product and date in the appropriate bed or row. If you have employees, interns or volunteers, it can be used to provide work instructions. You can use the template to plan your crop rotation and subsequent fertilizations, and know from year to year exactly where everything will be grown. Use the same basic template every year.
If you double crop or plant cover crops, record these crops in the field history sheet.
If you know each plot or bed size, or row length, you can determine approximate yield of various vegetables to help in your market planning For instance, in Sample #2b, each bed measures 150 ft. by 4 ft, or 600 sq. ft. This square footage yields approximately 320 pounds of tomatoes.
Organic Vegetable Records.03 Page
Sample 2b: Field HistoryTemplate MapField # 1 Year 2003
Each bed is 150 feet long by 4 feet wide (600 sq. ft.), with 2 feet between each bed for a pathway. Type in what is planted each year.
Plot #1 – 8 beds Bed #1-1 Lettuce Plot #4 – 12 bedsBed #1-25 Tomatoes
Bed #1-2 Assorted spring greens mix BBd #1-26 Tomatoes
Bed #1-3 Snow peas Bed #1-27 Green bush beans
Bed #1-4 Snap peas Bed #1-28 Yellow bush beans
Bed #1-5 Spinach Bed #1-29 Tomatoes
Bed #1-6 Lettuces Bed #1-30 Tomatoes
Bed #1-7 Green peas Bed #1-31 Pole green beans
Bed #1-8 Green peas Bed #1-32 Bush green beans
Plot #2 – 8 beds Bed #1-9 Broccoli Bed #1-33 Broccoli
Bed #1-10 Cabbage Bed #1-34 Cabbage
Bed #1-11 Red Norland potatoes Bed #1-35 Yellow onions
Bed #1-12 Red Norland potatoes Bed #1-36 Yellow onions
Bed #1-13 Kale Bed #1-37 Late potatoes
Bed #1-14 Cauliflower Bed #1-38 Late potatoes
Bed #1-15 Red Norland potatoes Bed #1-39 Red salad onions
Bed #1-16 Red Norland potatoes Bed #1-40 Red salad onions
Plot #3 - 8 beds Bed #1-17 Sweet basil Bed #1-41 Late potatoes
Bed #1-18 Parsley Bed #1-42 Late potatoes
Bed #1-19 Early tomatoes Bed #1-43 Carrots
Bed #1-20 Early tomatoes Bed #1-44 Carrots
Bed #1-21 Assorted greens Bed #1-45 Carrots
Bed #1-22 Lettuces Bed #1-46 Carrots
Bed #1-23 Early tomatoes Bed #1-47 Assorted perennial herbs
Bed #1-24 Cherry tomatoes Bed #1-47 Assorted perennial herbs
STEP 3: Develop seed purchase records. Because vegetable operations often purchase many varieties of seeds from different seed suppliers, maintaining seed records can be quite a challenge. For those of you who are computer enthusiasts and purchase the same seeds from year to year, a computer spreadsheet, such as Excel, can greatly reduce the time you spend on this record by entering in as much standard information as possible. Expect to put in a fair amount of time developing your spreadsheet, however.
Seed purchase records include copies of your seed orders, actual labels, seed tags or seed packets, and a record of your attempts to purchase organic seeds and reasons for purchasing non-organic untreated seed. Do not purchase treated seeds – seeds treated with synthetic product such as Captan are prohibited.
You should also keep receipts of your organic seedlings and perennials purchased and verification that the annual seedlings were certified organic. If you grow your own seedlings, greenhouse records or an activity log, showing how many flats were planted, planting dates, information regarding the inputs used in your soil mix, and products used for foliar sprays or pest control or disease control need to be kept. Use a clipboard to record the information in the greenhouse.
All seed purchase records should contain the following information: crop, variety, supplier, whether the seed is certified organic (0), untreated non-organic (U), or treated non-organic (T), type and brand of treatment (if known), and whether the seed is non-GMO. If the seed is organic, the seed will also be non-GMO. Planting GMO seed is prohibited and will result in de-certification for the portion of the field for 3 years. Be sure to use non-GMO rhizobial inoculants. Your seed orders should show crop, variety, and supplier. Some suppliers use the "OG" designation in the product code to identify the seed as organic. Indicate on your copy of the seed order which seed is certified organic.
Remember that organic seeds and organic seedlings are required for organic certification. Exceptions may be granted by the certification agent if organic seeds are not commercially available. The Organic Rule's definition of commercial availability states, "the ability to obtain a production input in an appropriate form, quality, or quantity to fulfill an essential function in a system of organic production or handling, as determined by the certifying agent in the course of reviewing the organic plan." With regard to seeds, the NOP has expanded commercial availability to include “equivalent varieties”.
Thus, if you purchase non-organic seed, you must document your attempts to purchase organic seed and have appropriate reasons for needing to use that specific variety. Specific reasons might be that a variety of lettuce is heat resistant; the 500 pounds of seed potatoes you need to purchase are not available from an organic supplier; a variety of peppers that turns red in your Northern climate is not available in organic form; or that you need pelleted carrot seed and can’t find it organically.
Tips:
1. Do not plant treated or genetically engineered seed, as this will disqualify that portion of the
field from certification for 3 years.
2. Make copies of your actual seed orders for your records. Mark all organic seeds with "OG" if
not already in the product code.
3. Keep seed packages, labels or seed tags to show the inspector. Keep labels of all inoculants
used.
If you choose to record all seed purchases, here is an example of a format to use:
Sample 3a: Seed Purchase Record
Year: 2003
Supplier Key: 1 - Fedco2 - Johnny's Selected Seeds3 - Garden City Seeds
4 - Ronniger's Potato Farm 5 – Seeds of Change 4 – Harris Seed
Seed
Crop Variety
Supplier
Organic (O)
Untreated non-organic (U), Treated non-organic (T)
Type and
brand of
treatment
Check (√) non-GMO
seed
Commercial
availability
reason #
Attempts to purchase organic seed
Lettuce
Summer Crisp
Anuenue
2
U
-
√
Heat resistant - 1
Looked at Fedco, Harris, Garden City and Seeds of Change
If you record only the non-organic seeds purchased, here is an example of a format to use:
Sample 3b: Non-Organic Seed Purchase Record
Year: 2003
Supplier: Johnny's Selected SeedsYear: 2003
Seed
Crop Variety
Type and brand of treatment
Check (√) non-GMO
seed
Commercial
availability
reason #
Attempts to purchase organic seed
Lettuce
Summer Crisp
Anuenue
Untreated
√
Heat resistant - 1
Looked at Fedco, Harris, Garden City and Seeds of Change
STEP 4: Develop input records. Input records must show what product(s) are used, the location (field or bed #), date of use, and application rate. Inputs include soil amendments, foliar sprays, pest and disease control products, and products applied with irrigation. Depending on how many products you use, you may need more than one type of input record. Your individual field template showing individual beds works well to record specific soil amendments applied, and the date and rate of application.
Tips:
1. Keep the input record clipboard where you store your application equipment or products used.
2. If you use a standard application rate or combine soil amendments or pest control products in
your own formula, write this information once at the top of the record and use a key number or
other identifier to enter the information in the appropriate column.
3. Use a different sheet/map template for soil amendments (minerals, compost and manure),
foliar sprays, pest or disease control products.
3. If micronutrients are applied, keep copies of soil or tissue tests to justify agronomic need.
Sample 4a: Soil Amendment Use Record
Year: 2003 Key: A – Cow manure, composted, 50 lb. per 600 sq. ft. bed
B – Calcitic limestone, 25 lb. per 600 sq. ft. bed
C – Micronutrient recipe according to soil tests for 600 sq. ft.
beds (rock phosphate-10 lb., boron-3 oz., Sul-Po-Mag-5 lb.)
Field #-Bed #
Soil Amendments
Date Applied
Rate of Application
Field #1-19, 20, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30,
A, B
Nov.15, 2002
As recipe above
Field #2- Plots #1, 2 and 3
A, B
Nov. 17, 2002
Per plot: 200 lb. lime
400 lb manure
Field #2 – Plots #4 and 5
B
Nov. 20, 2002
300 lb. lime
Sample 4b: Pest Control Product Use
Year: 2003
Field #-Bed #
Pest Problem
Pest Control Product
Date Applied
Rate of Application
Field #1 and #2-all around; in grass
Japanese Beetle
Milky Spore
4/14/03
1 tsp/3 ft.
Field #1-11, 12, 15, 16, 37, 38, 41, 42
Colorado Potato Beetle
Novador Bt
6/30/03
1.5 oz./gal
STEP 5: Develop an Activity Log. This record might be an individual activity log per field kept on a clipboard, calendar, journal, pocket notebook, personal data assistant (PDA), or ring binder. The field activity log is the easiest way for many operators to record activities. Examples of information you might record include: planting dates with bed # and crop; observations of plant health or disease problems; specific weed populations or problem locations; planting rates; harvest activities; equipment settings; weather conditions, i.e., heavy rains, soil erosion noted; or pest monitoring activities. Inspectors review these records to verify compliance and assess your monitoring program.
Sample 5: Journal
Journal entries:
3/9/03 Planted Red Norland potatoes, beds #1-11 and #1-12
Disced field #2 – noticed a patch of thistle emerging in plot #5
3/10/03 Heavy rains today; 2.5 inches in rain gauge; no erosion noted
STEP 6: Harvest Records. Whether the vegetable grower is selling at a farmers market, on-farm stand, CSA, or wholesale orders to grocery stores, cooperatives, or restaurants, harvest records of some type must be kept to audit production. Required information is the crop harvested, date of harvest, amount harvested and location where harvested (field, plot, bed or row #). This information is invaluable to the grower in planning for the future, especially when determining what crops were most profitable, when to plant specific crops for a continuous supply, or how much to grow in the future. Inspectors, on behalf of certifying agents, review these records to determine that you actually grew and harvested what you say you sold.
Simple harvest records can consist of a single sheet of paper for each type of crop (Sample 6a - advantage is that you can easily add up your total harvest.) You can also use map template to write in the amount harvested from each bed, whichever is easiest for you. Keep these records where vegetables are packed so that they can be kept at the time you are packing each vegetable.
Sample 6a: Harvest Record Per Vegetable
Field #: _______1_____ Crop Harvested: Lettuce, Red
Bed #
Amount Harvested
Date of Harvest
1
24 head (1 box)
6/4/03
1
30 head
6/6/03
1
24 head ( 1 box)
6/11/03
1
48 head
6/13/03
1
48 head
6/20/03
Total Harvested
134 head
Sample 6b: Harvest Record Per Date
Date June 25, 2003
Crop Harvested
Bed #
Amount Harvested
Lettuce, red
1
30 head
Asst. spring gr mix
2
45 bunches
Spinach
5
50 bu
Lettuce, gr
6
35 head
For larger growers, a useful harvest record is a template of all products sold. Sample 6c lists all crops, with columns that show the beds and amount harvested. Use a single sheet for each harvest day. Alphabetize the list. List each type of vegetable, including different varieties, if needed. Lot codes may be used if the operation is selling wholesale. This record may be used to take wholesale orders over the phone. The original serves as a “pick order”, with items checked as the order is filled. Putting the basic ID for each vegetable or fruit's lot code on this column helps the person remember the correct lot code. See also the section below on developing lot codes. The lot code column is not needed for a small operator who sells direct. If the vegetable or fruit is only harvested from one field, plot, or bed, write in the location # on your template for the season. With this record, not all vegetables are harvested every week. See Sample 6c below.
Sample 6c: Larger Operation Harvest Record (a single sheet is used for each harvest day)
Date:
Crop Harvested
Lot Code Initials
Expected Harvest Date
Field, Plot or Bed #
Amount Harvested
Walk-in Cooler (√)
Apples, Red Delicious
ARD
Sept-Oct.
Orchard
Apples, Yellow Delicious
AYD
Sept.-Oct.
Orchard
Basil, Sweet
BS
June-Oct.
#17
Beans, Green
BG
July-Oct.
Beans, Yellow
BY
July-Oct.
Carrots
C
July-Oct.
Tips:
1. Larger vegetable operations with employees may keep more complicated records that have
columns for packing goals and amounts actually packed.
2. Use standardized box sizes, such as 24 head of lettuce per box. Then you can just enter how
many boxes you packed.
3. Attach a lot number sticker or date stamp when packing wholesale boxes.
STEP 7: Develop storage records. If you harvest the day of market and do not use a walk-in cooler, you do not need to keep storage records. But if you are a fairly large vegetable operation, with deliveries several days a week, inventory records are essential. Likewise, storage records are important for crops such as potatoes, carrots, and apples. Inventory records for a walk-in cooler help the grower know what he/she has available that needs sold and how much to harvest for projected sales. Dates are important because produce needs to be as fresh as possible.
Required information is crop being stored, amount stored, date stored. Adding a column to the Seasonal Harvest Record template for storage information makes it also useful as a storage record. In Sample 6c above, the person need only check that the produce went into the cooler. This will work if all stored produce is likely to be sold the following day and you don't need inventory records.
Sample 7: Walk In Cooler Inventory Record (Organic only, 10'x12')
Cooler #: _______#1________
Crop
Stored
Lot #
Amount
Stored
Storage
Date
Date and Amount Sold
Date and Amount Returned
None Left in Inventory (√)
Lettuce, red
LR155
1 box
6/4/03
6/5/03 – all
Lettuce, gr
LG155
1 box
6/4/03
6/5/03 – all
Spinach
SP155
2 box
"
6/5/03 1.5
½ box 6/5/03
6/6/03
Tips:
1. If a walk-in cooler is also used for non-organic products, store organic and non-organic
products in separate areas.
2. If you cannot separate, store organic produce on higher shelves so non-organic produce does
not drip onto organic produce. Label organic and non-organic storage areas for easy
identification.
STEP 8: Lot Numbering System. If you are selling wholesale, you need to be able to track each specific box of produce to the date of harvest. A simple lot number is the date of harvest, such as 6/9/03, or 6903. You may want to identify the product with a product code, such as LR for Lettuce, Red. The lot number for red lettuce harvested on June 9 would be LR6903. Only you and your employees need to be able to decipher the lot number. Some growers use the Julian Date Calendar, a 3-digit number designated for each day of the year, starting with 001 for January 1. Since produce does not have a long shelf life, the year may be eliminated from the lot number to keep it short.
If you are selling wholesale and harvest the day of delivery, the invoice number can serve as your lot number. Be sure to write the lot number or invoice number on each box.
The lot number should be written next to the product on the invoice and also should be stamped or have a label affixed to the carton being delivered. There may be different lot numbers for various products on the same invoice. If a buyer has a question about a particular lot, you will be able to identify when it was harvested, from what bed, and when it was stored and shipped. By using lot number in storage, you can easily identify which products were harvested first, in order to sell them first.
If you use a product code for each crop, your sales order template should include a column for the code.
STEP 9: Develop sales records. Sales records may simply be a list of the vegetables you took to the farmers market and total sales for the market day. These do not have to be broken down by each type of vegetable sold. A daily sales total is sufficient. If you are going to multiple farmers markets, a table with a column for each market is a simple way to keep track of your total sales. At the end of the season, just total the columns. To save time, you can type in the names and dates of your markets ahead of time.
Sample 8a: Farmers Market Total Sales Record
Date of Market
Winona Farmers Market (Saturday)
Winona Farmers Market (Wednesday)
Rochester Farmers Market (Saturday)
6/7/03
245.00
368.00
6/11/03
219.00
6/21/03
304.00
397.00
Total Sales
549.00
219.00
765.00
For a CSA, the total sales are known at the beginning of the season, since subscriptions are sold in advance. But you should keep a record of the vegetables and amounts delivered to each CSA member in their weekly boxes. The Larger Operation Harvest Record (sample 6c) could be modified to record CSA deliveries. Just check the vegetables and fruits put into each box with the amounts. It is a good idea to keep a record of CSA member dates of deliveries and pick-ups. If there is ever a question, you will know if a member picked up their box. This record is not required for certification. See Samples 8b and 8c.
Sample 8b: CSA Weekly Box (Tuesday pick-ups)
Week of: 9/23/03
Vegetable/Fruit
Amount
Apples, Red delicious
3 lb.
Apples, Yellow delicious
2 lb.
Basil, sweet
1 bunch
Beans, green
1 lb.
Beans, yellow
½ lb.
Carrots
1 lb.
Sample 8c: CSA Weekly Pick-up Record
Delivery Month: June
CSA Member
Pick-up Location
6/3/03
6/10/03
6/17/03
6/24/03
Adams, Jim and Linda
350 Oak Ave, Winona
√
Bates, John and Mary
"
√
Collins, Ted and Brenda
"
√
Darby, Richard
225 Washington St, Winona
√
Jackson, Art and Lorraine
"
√
If you are selling to multiple restaurants, grocery stores, cooperatives, or other retailers, your sales records should at least consist of invoices and an overall record totaling sales. Invoices should contain the date, name of buyer, name of seller, products, lot #, amounts sold, and cost of products, with a total amount. Preprinted invoice books can be easily purchased at office supply stores. Each invoice is individually numbered and comes in duplicate or triplicate, so you can keep a copy for your own records. Computerized bookkeeping software, such as Quickbooks, offers another type of invoicing system that will automatically track various types of information, such as how much of specific vegetables are sold.
A total wholesale sales spreadsheet can keep track of all your wholesale sales. You can easily total the "Amount" columns at the end of the season to know your yearly sales. This record can help you plan for next year's sales, how much to grow, and what markets or products you may want to expand or delete.
Sample 8d: Wholesale Sales Record
Insert invoice number into the column for each wholesale order.
Date
BCC
Inv. # Amt.
PFC
Inv. # Amt.
Publix
Inv. # Amt.
Lucia's Restauant
Inv. # Amt.
6/2/02
10000
36.00
10001
48.00
10003
48.00
10004
36.00
6/9/03
10005
48.00
10006
60.00
10008
60.00
10009
60.00
6/16/03
10010
48.00
10011
60.00
10013
60.00
10014
60.00
STEP 10: Other Records
There are other records which may or may not be needed to verify compliance, depending on your situation. Examples include non-organic or buffer crop usage forms; documentation of previous land use for rented and/or newly purchased land; neighbor notification letters; documentation of adjoining land use; residue analyses of soil, crops, or inputs; labels and product information for all inputs; compost production records; split operation records; equipment cleaning records; transportation records, such as bills of lading; audit control summaries; and complaint logs.
*Forms developed by James A. Riddle and Joyce E. Ford for the Carolina Farm Stewardship Association. All forms designed to comply with the requirements of the USDA’s National Organic Program.
The National Organic Program's (NOP) Organic Rule §205.103 states that "a certified operation must maintain records for production, harvesting and handling of organic agricultural products…". These records must "be adapted to the particular business that the certified operation is conducting; fully disclose all activities and transactions of the certified operation in sufficient detail as to be readily understood and audited; be maintained for not less than 5 years; and be sufficient to demonstrate compliance" with the Final Organic Rule itself. These records must be "available for inspection and copying during normal business hours" by the organic inspector or other authorized representatives.
Because vegetable operations vary widely in the types of crops grown, amount of acreage, number and size of fields in production, and marketing through farmers markets, on-farm stands, CSA and/or wholesale, it is difficult to create a template or system that fits all types of certified organic vegetable operations. The record keeping system presented below attempts to walk organic vegetable growers through recordkeeping options to develop systems of records pertinent to their specific operations. The requirements for each type of record are given and an example of that type of record is shown.
Vegetable farm records that meet NOP requirements can be grouped into the following categories:
1. Farm and field maps
2. Field history sheets
3. Seed purchase records
4. Input records (soil amendments, foliar sprays, pest control products, compost production record)
5. Activity logs
6. Harvest records
7. Storage records
8. Lot numbering system for wholesale sales
9. Sales records
10. Other records
The operation’s record keeping system must be sufficient to be "readily understood and audited". In other words, the ability must exist to trace each crop from field to harvest, storage and sales, including the application of soil amendments, pest or disease control products, and other inputs. You need to be able to track crops to your farm or fields and show how they were grown. The records specifically relating to “audit trail” for your operation are field history sheets, harvest, storage and sales records, (including a lot number for operations that sell wholesale, if applicable). Other records listed above verify compliance of specific standards in the rule, such as the use of organic seeds.
Not every operation needs all of the records listed above. As a certified organic producer, you need to determine which types of records you need, so that your records are “adapted to your operation” and "disclose your activities and transactions".
General Tips:
1. Develop generic record templates, typing or writing as much information as possible, so that you need only check a column, write in a date, or record an amount.
2. Keep the records relevant and simple. They should be useful to you in making management decisions as well as showing compliance to the Organic Rule.
3. Keep the record in a location that is accessible to use. For example, keep the cooler log outside the cooler door. When you put vegetables into the cooler or take them out, it is easy to quickly check the amounts and date.
4. Keep records up to date. It is much harder to go back and reconstruct records after the fact.
5. At the end of the year or season, gather all records from clipboards and file them in a ring binder.
6. Review last year’s records when making plans for the coming season.
7. Modify or improve your records over time. Discard useless records and incorporate new ones.
STEP 1: Develop or draw a farm map. Start with an FSA, NRCS, plat map, surveyors map, or hand or computer drawn map of your farm or fields. Mark all fields, roads, and adjoining land uses such as conventional fields, pastures or neighboring residences. Indicate locations of wild areas such as woodlands, beneficial habitat areas, and other landmarks. Mark on the map areas where you maintain permanent waterways, windbreaks, retention ponds, buffer zones, or other landmarks. Each field or plot should be numbered. Show relevant farm buildings. Indicate which direction is "North". The size or acreage can be added if there is room. Boundaries should be clearly delineated. See Sample # 1.
Tips:
1. Do not use color markers, as these maps are copied and the colors do not show when copied.
2. Do not show individual annual crops on this general farm map. Annual crops change from year to year.
3. Minimize changing field acreages and field numbers from year to year.
Sample 1: Wiscoy Organic Produce Farm Map
Neighbor's conventional fields
30' treeline buffer
Field #1 – 1 acre Field #2 – 1 acre
N
Greenhouse #1
Equip
storage
Crop
dry storage
Garage
Greenhouse #2
Packing shed / Cooler
House
County road – not sprayed
Neighbor's Woodland
Driveway
Apple/Pear Orchard - 50 trees
STEP 2: Develop field history sheets. You may be required to use the field history sheets provided by the certifying agent as part of the Organic Farm Plan questionnaire. The certifier’s forms may prove difficult to use as they are often designed for fields where single crops are grown. Because they are filled out prior to planting, the Field History Sheet attached to your Organic Farm Plan application may not be totally accurate. The certifying agent's field history sheet can be filled out with general categories of vegetable crops, such as brassicas, sweet corn, greens, or alliums, listing all soil amendment and/or pest or disease control inputs used on that field. This record is used by the inspector to verify that the crops you actually plant correspond to the crops you stated in the Organic Farm Plan. It is also used to determine the actual crops and fields you are requesting for certification, the year of organic eligibility for new fields, and to assess your crop rotation and soil fertility program.
Sample 2a: Field History Sheet in your Organic Farm Plan Questionnaire
Year: 2003
Field #
O-Organic
T-Transitional
C-Conventional
Acreage
Crops
Inputs
Input Date of Use Rate of Use
Expected Yield
#1
O
1.0
Mixed vegetables
Cow manure
Lime
11/03
50 lb/600 sq. ft.
25 lb/600 sq.ft.
Variable
#2
O
.75
.25
Sweet corn
Squash
Cow manure
Lime
11/03
1 ton/acre
Variable
Orchard
O
50 trees
25 Pear and 25 Apple
Cow manure
11/03
200 lb/acre
250 bushels
If you grow multiple types of crops in a single field, a good way to track crops grown is to draw an individual field map for each field, delineating plots, rows or beds. Number each plot, row or bed. An example of a numbering system is Field #1-1, #1-2, #1-3, Field #2-1, #2-2, #2-3, etc, where a 1-acre field is divided into plots and then into beds. All plots or beds growing the same crops and receiving the same inputs can be tracked together, rather than tracking every plot or bed separately.
Once you have designed the blank template map, make copies. This detailed field record, showing plots, rows or beds, is your key to a simple record keeping system. The template can be used as an activity log showing dates of plantings; as an input use record showing applications of foliar sprays, pest or disease control products, and soil amendments, as a harvest record. Record the activity or product and date in the appropriate bed or row. If you have employees, interns or volunteers, it can be used to provide work instructions. You can use the template to plan your crop rotation and subsequent fertilizations, and know from year to year exactly where everything will be grown. Use the same basic template every year.
If you double crop or plant cover crops, record these crops in the field history sheet.
If you know each plot or bed size, or row length, you can determine approximate yield of various vegetables to help in your market planning For instance, in Sample #2b, each bed measures 150 ft. by 4 ft, or 600 sq. ft. This square footage yields approximately 320 pounds of tomatoes.
Organic Vegetable Records.03 Page
Sample 2b: Field HistoryTemplate MapField # 1 Year 2003
Each bed is 150 feet long by 4 feet wide (600 sq. ft.), with 2 feet between each bed for a pathway. Type in what is planted each year.
Plot #1 – 8 beds Bed #1-1 Lettuce Plot #4 – 12 bedsBed #1-25 Tomatoes
Bed #1-2 Assorted spring greens mix BBd #1-26 Tomatoes
Bed #1-3 Snow peas Bed #1-27 Green bush beans
Bed #1-4 Snap peas Bed #1-28 Yellow bush beans
Bed #1-5 Spinach Bed #1-29 Tomatoes
Bed #1-6 Lettuces Bed #1-30 Tomatoes
Bed #1-7 Green peas Bed #1-31 Pole green beans
Bed #1-8 Green peas Bed #1-32 Bush green beans
Plot #2 – 8 beds Bed #1-9 Broccoli Bed #1-33 Broccoli
Bed #1-10 Cabbage Bed #1-34 Cabbage
Bed #1-11 Red Norland potatoes Bed #1-35 Yellow onions
Bed #1-12 Red Norland potatoes Bed #1-36 Yellow onions
Bed #1-13 Kale Bed #1-37 Late potatoes
Bed #1-14 Cauliflower Bed #1-38 Late potatoes
Bed #1-15 Red Norland potatoes Bed #1-39 Red salad onions
Bed #1-16 Red Norland potatoes Bed #1-40 Red salad onions
Plot #3 - 8 beds Bed #1-17 Sweet basil Bed #1-41 Late potatoes
Bed #1-18 Parsley Bed #1-42 Late potatoes
Bed #1-19 Early tomatoes Bed #1-43 Carrots
Bed #1-20 Early tomatoes Bed #1-44 Carrots
Bed #1-21 Assorted greens Bed #1-45 Carrots
Bed #1-22 Lettuces Bed #1-46 Carrots
Bed #1-23 Early tomatoes Bed #1-47 Assorted perennial herbs
Bed #1-24 Cherry tomatoes Bed #1-47 Assorted perennial herbs
STEP 3: Develop seed purchase records. Because vegetable operations often purchase many varieties of seeds from different seed suppliers, maintaining seed records can be quite a challenge. For those of you who are computer enthusiasts and purchase the same seeds from year to year, a computer spreadsheet, such as Excel, can greatly reduce the time you spend on this record by entering in as much standard information as possible. Expect to put in a fair amount of time developing your spreadsheet, however.
Seed purchase records include copies of your seed orders, actual labels, seed tags or seed packets, and a record of your attempts to purchase organic seeds and reasons for purchasing non-organic untreated seed. Do not purchase treated seeds – seeds treated with synthetic product such as Captan are prohibited.
You should also keep receipts of your organic seedlings and perennials purchased and verification that the annual seedlings were certified organic. If you grow your own seedlings, greenhouse records or an activity log, showing how many flats were planted, planting dates, information regarding the inputs used in your soil mix, and products used for foliar sprays or pest control or disease control need to be kept. Use a clipboard to record the information in the greenhouse.
All seed purchase records should contain the following information: crop, variety, supplier, whether the seed is certified organic (0), untreated non-organic (U), or treated non-organic (T), type and brand of treatment (if known), and whether the seed is non-GMO. If the seed is organic, the seed will also be non-GMO. Planting GMO seed is prohibited and will result in de-certification for the portion of the field for 3 years. Be sure to use non-GMO rhizobial inoculants. Your seed orders should show crop, variety, and supplier. Some suppliers use the "OG" designation in the product code to identify the seed as organic. Indicate on your copy of the seed order which seed is certified organic.
Remember that organic seeds and organic seedlings are required for organic certification. Exceptions may be granted by the certification agent if organic seeds are not commercially available. The Organic Rule's definition of commercial availability states, "the ability to obtain a production input in an appropriate form, quality, or quantity to fulfill an essential function in a system of organic production or handling, as determined by the certifying agent in the course of reviewing the organic plan." With regard to seeds, the NOP has expanded commercial availability to include “equivalent varieties”.
Thus, if you purchase non-organic seed, you must document your attempts to purchase organic seed and have appropriate reasons for needing to use that specific variety. Specific reasons might be that a variety of lettuce is heat resistant; the 500 pounds of seed potatoes you need to purchase are not available from an organic supplier; a variety of peppers that turns red in your Northern climate is not available in organic form; or that you need pelleted carrot seed and can’t find it organically.
Tips:
1. Do not plant treated or genetically engineered seed, as this will disqualify that portion of the
field from certification for 3 years.
2. Make copies of your actual seed orders for your records. Mark all organic seeds with "OG" if
not already in the product code.
3. Keep seed packages, labels or seed tags to show the inspector. Keep labels of all inoculants
used.
If you choose to record all seed purchases, here is an example of a format to use:
Sample 3a: Seed Purchase Record
Year: 2003
Supplier Key: 1 - Fedco2 - Johnny's Selected Seeds3 - Garden City Seeds
4 - Ronniger's Potato Farm 5 – Seeds of Change 4 – Harris Seed
Seed
Crop Variety
Supplier
Organic (O)
Untreated non-organic (U), Treated non-organic (T)
Type and
brand of
treatment
Check (√) non-GMO
seed
Commercial
availability
reason #
Attempts to purchase organic seed
Lettuce
Summer Crisp
Anuenue
2
U
-
√
Heat resistant - 1
Looked at Fedco, Harris, Garden City and Seeds of Change
If you record only the non-organic seeds purchased, here is an example of a format to use:
Sample 3b: Non-Organic Seed Purchase Record
Year: 2003
Supplier: Johnny's Selected SeedsYear: 2003
Seed
Crop Variety
Type and brand of treatment
Check (√) non-GMO
seed
Commercial
availability
reason #
Attempts to purchase organic seed
Lettuce
Summer Crisp
Anuenue
Untreated
√
Heat resistant - 1
Looked at Fedco, Harris, Garden City and Seeds of Change
STEP 4: Develop input records. Input records must show what product(s) are used, the location (field or bed #), date of use, and application rate. Inputs include soil amendments, foliar sprays, pest and disease control products, and products applied with irrigation. Depending on how many products you use, you may need more than one type of input record. Your individual field template showing individual beds works well to record specific soil amendments applied, and the date and rate of application.
Tips:
1. Keep the input record clipboard where you store your application equipment or products used.
2. If you use a standard application rate or combine soil amendments or pest control products in
your own formula, write this information once at the top of the record and use a key number or
other identifier to enter the information in the appropriate column.
3. Use a different sheet/map template for soil amendments (minerals, compost and manure),
foliar sprays, pest or disease control products.
3. If micronutrients are applied, keep copies of soil or tissue tests to justify agronomic need.
Sample 4a: Soil Amendment Use Record
Year: 2003 Key: A – Cow manure, composted, 50 lb. per 600 sq. ft. bed
B – Calcitic limestone, 25 lb. per 600 sq. ft. bed
C – Micronutrient recipe according to soil tests for 600 sq. ft.
beds (rock phosphate-10 lb., boron-3 oz., Sul-Po-Mag-5 lb.)
Field #-Bed #
Soil Amendments
Date Applied
Rate of Application
Field #1-19, 20, 23, 24, 25, 26, 29, 30,
A, B
Nov.15, 2002
As recipe above
Field #2- Plots #1, 2 and 3
A, B
Nov. 17, 2002
Per plot: 200 lb. lime
400 lb manure
Field #2 – Plots #4 and 5
B
Nov. 20, 2002
300 lb. lime
Sample 4b: Pest Control Product Use
Year: 2003
Field #-Bed #
Pest Problem
Pest Control Product
Date Applied
Rate of Application
Field #1 and #2-all around; in grass
Japanese Beetle
Milky Spore
4/14/03
1 tsp/3 ft.
Field #1-11, 12, 15, 16, 37, 38, 41, 42
Colorado Potato Beetle
Novador Bt
6/30/03
1.5 oz./gal
STEP 5: Develop an Activity Log. This record might be an individual activity log per field kept on a clipboard, calendar, journal, pocket notebook, personal data assistant (PDA), or ring binder. The field activity log is the easiest way for many operators to record activities. Examples of information you might record include: planting dates with bed # and crop; observations of plant health or disease problems; specific weed populations or problem locations; planting rates; harvest activities; equipment settings; weather conditions, i.e., heavy rains, soil erosion noted; or pest monitoring activities. Inspectors review these records to verify compliance and assess your monitoring program.
Sample 5: Journal
Journal entries:
3/9/03 Planted Red Norland potatoes, beds #1-11 and #1-12
Disced field #2 – noticed a patch of thistle emerging in plot #5
3/10/03 Heavy rains today; 2.5 inches in rain gauge; no erosion noted
STEP 6: Harvest Records. Whether the vegetable grower is selling at a farmers market, on-farm stand, CSA, or wholesale orders to grocery stores, cooperatives, or restaurants, harvest records of some type must be kept to audit production. Required information is the crop harvested, date of harvest, amount harvested and location where harvested (field, plot, bed or row #). This information is invaluable to the grower in planning for the future, especially when determining what crops were most profitable, when to plant specific crops for a continuous supply, or how much to grow in the future. Inspectors, on behalf of certifying agents, review these records to determine that you actually grew and harvested what you say you sold.
Simple harvest records can consist of a single sheet of paper for each type of crop (Sample 6a - advantage is that you can easily add up your total harvest.) You can also use map template to write in the amount harvested from each bed, whichever is easiest for you. Keep these records where vegetables are packed so that they can be kept at the time you are packing each vegetable.
Sample 6a: Harvest Record Per Vegetable
Field #: _______1_____ Crop Harvested: Lettuce, Red
Bed #
Amount Harvested
Date of Harvest
1
24 head (1 box)
6/4/03
1
30 head
6/6/03
1
24 head ( 1 box)
6/11/03
1
48 head
6/13/03
1
48 head
6/20/03
Total Harvested
134 head
Sample 6b: Harvest Record Per Date
Date June 25, 2003
Crop Harvested
Bed #
Amount Harvested
Lettuce, red
1
30 head
Asst. spring gr mix
2
45 bunches
Spinach
5
50 bu
Lettuce, gr
6
35 head
For larger growers, a useful harvest record is a template of all products sold. Sample 6c lists all crops, with columns that show the beds and amount harvested. Use a single sheet for each harvest day. Alphabetize the list. List each type of vegetable, including different varieties, if needed. Lot codes may be used if the operation is selling wholesale. This record may be used to take wholesale orders over the phone. The original serves as a “pick order”, with items checked as the order is filled. Putting the basic ID for each vegetable or fruit's lot code on this column helps the person remember the correct lot code. See also the section below on developing lot codes. The lot code column is not needed for a small operator who sells direct. If the vegetable or fruit is only harvested from one field, plot, or bed, write in the location # on your template for the season. With this record, not all vegetables are harvested every week. See Sample 6c below.
Sample 6c: Larger Operation Harvest Record (a single sheet is used for each harvest day)
Date:
Crop Harvested
Lot Code Initials
Expected Harvest Date
Field, Plot or Bed #
Amount Harvested
Walk-in Cooler (√)
Apples, Red Delicious
ARD
Sept-Oct.
Orchard
Apples, Yellow Delicious
AYD
Sept.-Oct.
Orchard
Basil, Sweet
BS
June-Oct.
#17
Beans, Green
BG
July-Oct.
Beans, Yellow
BY
July-Oct.
Carrots
C
July-Oct.
Tips:
1. Larger vegetable operations with employees may keep more complicated records that have
columns for packing goals and amounts actually packed.
2. Use standardized box sizes, such as 24 head of lettuce per box. Then you can just enter how
many boxes you packed.
3. Attach a lot number sticker or date stamp when packing wholesale boxes.
STEP 7: Develop storage records. If you harvest the day of market and do not use a walk-in cooler, you do not need to keep storage records. But if you are a fairly large vegetable operation, with deliveries several days a week, inventory records are essential. Likewise, storage records are important for crops such as potatoes, carrots, and apples. Inventory records for a walk-in cooler help the grower know what he/she has available that needs sold and how much to harvest for projected sales. Dates are important because produce needs to be as fresh as possible.
Required information is crop being stored, amount stored, date stored. Adding a column to the Seasonal Harvest Record template for storage information makes it also useful as a storage record. In Sample 6c above, the person need only check that the produce went into the cooler. This will work if all stored produce is likely to be sold the following day and you don't need inventory records.
Sample 7: Walk In Cooler Inventory Record (Organic only, 10'x12')
Cooler #: _______#1________
Crop
Stored
Lot #
Amount
Stored
Storage
Date
Date and Amount Sold
Date and Amount Returned
None Left in Inventory (√)
Lettuce, red
LR155
1 box
6/4/03
6/5/03 – all
Lettuce, gr
LG155
1 box
6/4/03
6/5/03 – all
Spinach
SP155
2 box
"
6/5/03 1.5
½ box 6/5/03
6/6/03
Tips:
1. If a walk-in cooler is also used for non-organic products, store organic and non-organic
products in separate areas.
2. If you cannot separate, store organic produce on higher shelves so non-organic produce does
not drip onto organic produce. Label organic and non-organic storage areas for easy
identification.
STEP 8: Lot Numbering System. If you are selling wholesale, you need to be able to track each specific box of produce to the date of harvest. A simple lot number is the date of harvest, such as 6/9/03, or 6903. You may want to identify the product with a product code, such as LR for Lettuce, Red. The lot number for red lettuce harvested on June 9 would be LR6903. Only you and your employees need to be able to decipher the lot number. Some growers use the Julian Date Calendar, a 3-digit number designated for each day of the year, starting with 001 for January 1. Since produce does not have a long shelf life, the year may be eliminated from the lot number to keep it short.
If you are selling wholesale and harvest the day of delivery, the invoice number can serve as your lot number. Be sure to write the lot number or invoice number on each box.
The lot number should be written next to the product on the invoice and also should be stamped or have a label affixed to the carton being delivered. There may be different lot numbers for various products on the same invoice. If a buyer has a question about a particular lot, you will be able to identify when it was harvested, from what bed, and when it was stored and shipped. By using lot number in storage, you can easily identify which products were harvested first, in order to sell them first.
If you use a product code for each crop, your sales order template should include a column for the code.
STEP 9: Develop sales records. Sales records may simply be a list of the vegetables you took to the farmers market and total sales for the market day. These do not have to be broken down by each type of vegetable sold. A daily sales total is sufficient. If you are going to multiple farmers markets, a table with a column for each market is a simple way to keep track of your total sales. At the end of the season, just total the columns. To save time, you can type in the names and dates of your markets ahead of time.
Sample 8a: Farmers Market Total Sales Record
Date of Market
Winona Farmers Market (Saturday)
Winona Farmers Market (Wednesday)
Rochester Farmers Market (Saturday)
6/7/03
245.00
368.00
6/11/03
219.00
6/21/03
304.00
397.00
Total Sales
549.00
219.00
765.00
For a CSA, the total sales are known at the beginning of the season, since subscriptions are sold in advance. But you should keep a record of the vegetables and amounts delivered to each CSA member in their weekly boxes. The Larger Operation Harvest Record (sample 6c) could be modified to record CSA deliveries. Just check the vegetables and fruits put into each box with the amounts. It is a good idea to keep a record of CSA member dates of deliveries and pick-ups. If there is ever a question, you will know if a member picked up their box. This record is not required for certification. See Samples 8b and 8c.
Sample 8b: CSA Weekly Box (Tuesday pick-ups)
Week of: 9/23/03
Vegetable/Fruit
Amount
Apples, Red delicious
3 lb.
Apples, Yellow delicious
2 lb.
Basil, sweet
1 bunch
Beans, green
1 lb.
Beans, yellow
½ lb.
Carrots
1 lb.
Sample 8c: CSA Weekly Pick-up Record
Delivery Month: June
CSA Member
Pick-up Location
6/3/03
6/10/03
6/17/03
6/24/03
Adams, Jim and Linda
350 Oak Ave, Winona
√
Bates, John and Mary
"
√
Collins, Ted and Brenda
"
√
Darby, Richard
225 Washington St, Winona
√
Jackson, Art and Lorraine
"
√
If you are selling to multiple restaurants, grocery stores, cooperatives, or other retailers, your sales records should at least consist of invoices and an overall record totaling sales. Invoices should contain the date, name of buyer, name of seller, products, lot #, amounts sold, and cost of products, with a total amount. Preprinted invoice books can be easily purchased at office supply stores. Each invoice is individually numbered and comes in duplicate or triplicate, so you can keep a copy for your own records. Computerized bookkeeping software, such as Quickbooks, offers another type of invoicing system that will automatically track various types of information, such as how much of specific vegetables are sold.
A total wholesale sales spreadsheet can keep track of all your wholesale sales. You can easily total the "Amount" columns at the end of the season to know your yearly sales. This record can help you plan for next year's sales, how much to grow, and what markets or products you may want to expand or delete.
Sample 8d: Wholesale Sales Record
Insert invoice number into the column for each wholesale order.
Date
BCC
Inv. # Amt.
PFC
Inv. # Amt.
Publix
Inv. # Amt.
Lucia's Restauant
Inv. # Amt.
6/2/02
10000
36.00
10001
48.00
10003
48.00
10004
36.00
6/9/03
10005
48.00
10006
60.00
10008
60.00
10009
60.00
6/16/03
10010
48.00
10011
60.00
10013
60.00
10014
60.00
STEP 10: Other Records
There are other records which may or may not be needed to verify compliance, depending on your situation. Examples include non-organic or buffer crop usage forms; documentation of previous land use for rented and/or newly purchased land; neighbor notification letters; documentation of adjoining land use; residue analyses of soil, crops, or inputs; labels and product information for all inputs; compost production records; split operation records; equipment cleaning records; transportation records, such as bills of lading; audit control summaries; and complaint logs.
Thursday, December 13, 2012
Standard simple JV (draft) agreement
Draft joint venture agreement - the cultivation of highland vegetables at Lot NT xxx 6/12/12
This contract has been made on the xx December, 2012 xxxxx, hereinafter referred to as the " First Party", residing at kg. Iman, Lomunu Kibabaig, P.O. Box 35, 89507 Penampang, Sabah, Malaysia and Encik (Passport No: xxxxx), hereinafter referred to as the " Second Party", having as his residence in Sabah at KM 1, Jalan Kau Luan, Kg. Cinta Mata, Kundasang, Ranau.
WHEREAS the first party and the second party had on the day mentioned above agreed to start a joint venture business in the cultivation of highland vegetables varieties on a plot of land approximately 3.5 acres as roughly marked on the sketch in appendix A herein attached.
The contract will come into effect from 1st January, 2013 and will be valid till 31st December, 2013 unless renewed.
Both the parties agree to the following terms and conditions:
(1) The first party is responsible for securing the lease of the land from the various land owners and to ensure that their monthly or annual rentals are duly paid in time;
(2) The first party is responsible to provide and supply the agriculture inputs of vegetable seeds, fertilizers, and all the necessary pesticides as approved by the Government and relevant international governing bodies;
(3) The second party is responsible to provide labor needed for the whole project from land preparation, nursery establishment and maintenance, transplantation, weeding, fertilizer and periodical pesticides application, irrigation and watering, staking and pruning, harvesting, picking and carrying them to a pickup, storage or processing center, cleaning, sorting, bundling, boxing, bundling or weighing and keeping a field register of production from various plots;
(4) The second party is responsible to provide labor for the regular repairs of irrigation system, water cisterns, pipes and water tanks and security oversight of the farm at all times;
(5) The first party is primarily responsible for the marketing of the vegetables and where needed, the second party may be required to assist in getting old customers of the farm to continue purchasing from the farm at a price and terms to be agreed and approved by the second party.
(6) The second party is responsible to ensure that all his workers, including his family members, are legally covered and in possession of valid travel documents and work pass and no illegals may be employed in any activities of the farm and any illegals found in the employment of the second party will make this contact void and null.
(7) The second party will co-operate with the first party or his authorized agents to maintain and upkeep the field register and plot numbers particulars and to ensure that the agricultural practices on the use of pesticides, the disposals of empty containers and vessel, are strictly adhered to.
The office of the joint venture business will be located at Lot Ntxx, KM 1, Jalan Kau Luan, Kg. Cinta Mata, Kundasang, Ranau.
The daily, weekly, monthly and seasonal harvests will be carefully recorded and both parties must at month end certified to its accuracies, as provided in the monthly returns in Appendix B herein attached, and such records will be aggregated at 3 months intervals where the yields, either physically if physical stocks are actually taken at time of harvest or based on the farm gate price ruling on the day of harvest.
And in consideration thereto, the first party is entitled to 70 % of the yield and the remaining 30% will be for the second party except where the harvests come from plots on which the first party has provided green house (camps) where the second party is only entitled to 20% and the 80% will go to the first party until such time the full cost of establishing the Geenhouse is fully recovered from the extra 10% .
Both of the parties can cancel the contract at any time of the contract period after serving a one month notice period. The contract can also be cancelled if either of the parties is involved in any sort of fraudulent activity. Renewal of the contract after the expiry date is at the discretion of both the parties. Both the parties have agreed to the above terms and conditions and put their signatures below as proofs of their consent and approval of the above terms and conditions of this joint venture.
Signature of the First Party Signature of the Second Party
Witness: Witness
[ ]
(BM translation)
Kontrak ini telah dibuat pada Desember xx, 2012 antara -xxxx), selanjutnya disebut sebagai "Pihak Pertama", yang berada di kg. Iman, Lomunu Kibabaig, P.O. Box 35, 89.507 Penampang, Sabah, Malaysia dan Encik (Paspor No: xxxxx), selanjutnya disebut sebagai "Pihak Kedua", memiliki sebagai kediamannya di Sabah di KM 1, Jalan Kau Luan, Kg. Cinta Mata, Kundasang, Ranau.
BAHAWASANYA pihak pertama dan pihak kedua pada hari yang disebutkan di atas bersetuju untuk memulakan perniagaan usahasama dalam penanaman satu jenis sayur-sayuran tanah tinggi di atas plot tanah kira-kira 3.5 ekar seperti yang ditandakan pada lakaran di lampiran A di sini dilampirkan.
Kontrak ini akan berkuat kuasa mulai 1 Januari 2013 dan akan sah sehingga 31 Disember, 2013 melainkan diperbaharui.
Kedua-dua pihak bersetuju untuk terma dan syarat berikut:
(1) Pihak pertama adalah bertanggungjawab untuk mendapatkan pajakan tanah dari pelbagai pemilik tanah dan untuk memastikan bahawa sewa bulanan atau tahunan mereka dibayar dengan sewajarnya dalam masa tertentu;
(2) Pihak pertama adalah bertanggungjawab untuk menyediakan dan membekalkan input pertanian benih sayur-sayuran, baja dan semua racun perosak yang diperlukan sebagaimana yang diluluskan oleh Kerajaan dan badan-badan yang mentadbir antarabangsa yang relevan;
(3) Pihak kedua adalah bertanggungjawab untuk menyediakan buruh yang diperlukan bagi keseluruhan projek dari penyediaan tanah, penubuhan nurseri dan penyelenggaraan, pemindahan, merumput, baja dan racun perosak berkala permohonan, pengairan dan menyiram, mempertaruhkan dan mencantas, penuaian, memilih dan membawa hasil tuaian ke pusat pikap, penyimpanan atau pemprosesan, pembersihan, sorting, gabungan, memasukan dalam peti, gabungan atau menimbang dan menjaga dan mendaftar pengeluaran pelbagai daripada plot;
(4) pihak kedua adalah bertanggungjawab untuk menyediakan buruh untuk pembaikan sistem pengairan, tangki air, paip dan kolam air dan pengawasan keselamatan ladang pada setiap masa;
(5) Pihak pertama adalah terutamanya bertanggungjawab untuk pemasaran sayur-sayuran dan di mana perlu, parti kedua mungkin diperlukan untuk membantu dalam mendapatkan pelanggan lama ladang untuk terus membeli dari ladang pada
harga dan terma yang akan dipersetujui dan diluluskan oleh pihak kedua.
(6) pihak kedua adalah bertanggungjawab untuk memastikan bahawa semua pekerja, termasuk ahli keluarga beliau, mengikut undang-undang dilindungi dan
memiliki dokumen perjalanan yang sah dan pas kerja dan tiada PATI boleh digunakan dalam apa-apa aktiviti ladang dan mana-mana pendatang tanpa izin ditemui di pekerjaan pihak kedua akan membuat ini batal kenalan dan batal.
(7) pihak kedua akan bersama-beroperasi dengan pihak pertama atau ejen yang diberi kuasa untuk mengekalkan dan penjagaan daftar ladang dan butir-butir plot-nya dan untuk memastikan bahawa amalan pertanian penggunaan racun perosak, pelupusan bekas kosong dan tong plastic, dipatuhi.
Pejabat perniagaan usahasama akan terletak di Ntxx Lot, KM 1, Jalan Kau Luan, Kg. Cinta Mata, Kundasang, Ranau.
Tuaian harian, mingguan, bulanan dan bermusim akan teliti direkodkan dan kedua-dua pihak mesti pada akhir bulan yang diperakui kepada ketepatan, sebagaimana yang diperuntukkan dalam pulangan bulanan di Lampiran B yang dilampirkan di sini, dan rekod itu akan dijumlahkan pada 3 bulan selang di mana hasil , sama ada secara fizikal jika saham fizikal sebenarnya diambil pada masa penuaian atau berdasarkan ketetapan ladang harga pintu pada hari tuaian.
Dan berhubung pertimbangan, parti pertama adalah berhak kepada 70% hasil dan baki 30% akan menjadi kepunyaan parti kedua kecuali jika tuaian datang dari plot di mana pihak pertama telah disediakan rumah hijau (khemah) di mana pihak kedua hanya berhak kepada 20% dan 80% akan pergi ke parti pertama sehingga masa itu kos penuh mewujudkan Geenhouse pulih sepenuhnya daripada tambahan 10%.
Kedua-dua pihak boleh membatalkan kontrak itu pada bila-bila masa tempoh kontrak selepas berkhidmat tempoh notis satu bulan. Kontrak juga boleh dibatalkan jika sama ada pihak-pihak yang terlibat dalam apa-apa jenis aktiviti penipuan. Pembaharuan kontrak selepas tarikh luput adalah pada budi bicara kedua-dua pihak. Kedua-dua pihak telah bersetuju untuk terma-terma dan syarat-syarat di atas dan meletakkan tandatangan mereka di bawah sebagai bukti persetujuan dan kelulusan terma dan syarat di atas usahasama ini.
Tandatangan Tandatangan
Pihak Pertama
Parti Kedua
His banner over us is Love
This contract has been made on the xx December, 2012 xxxxx, hereinafter referred to as the " First Party", residing at kg. Iman, Lomunu Kibabaig, P.O. Box 35, 89507 Penampang, Sabah, Malaysia and Encik (Passport No: xxxxx), hereinafter referred to as the " Second Party", having as his residence in Sabah at KM 1, Jalan Kau Luan, Kg. Cinta Mata, Kundasang, Ranau.
WHEREAS the first party and the second party had on the day mentioned above agreed to start a joint venture business in the cultivation of highland vegetables varieties on a plot of land approximately 3.5 acres as roughly marked on the sketch in appendix A herein attached.
The contract will come into effect from 1st January, 2013 and will be valid till 31st December, 2013 unless renewed.
Both the parties agree to the following terms and conditions:
(1) The first party is responsible for securing the lease of the land from the various land owners and to ensure that their monthly or annual rentals are duly paid in time;
(2) The first party is responsible to provide and supply the agriculture inputs of vegetable seeds, fertilizers, and all the necessary pesticides as approved by the Government and relevant international governing bodies;
(3) The second party is responsible to provide labor needed for the whole project from land preparation, nursery establishment and maintenance, transplantation, weeding, fertilizer and periodical pesticides application, irrigation and watering, staking and pruning, harvesting, picking and carrying them to a pickup, storage or processing center, cleaning, sorting, bundling, boxing, bundling or weighing and keeping a field register of production from various plots;
(4) The second party is responsible to provide labor for the regular repairs of irrigation system, water cisterns, pipes and water tanks and security oversight of the farm at all times;
(5) The first party is primarily responsible for the marketing of the vegetables and where needed, the second party may be required to assist in getting old customers of the farm to continue purchasing from the farm at a price and terms to be agreed and approved by the second party.
(6) The second party is responsible to ensure that all his workers, including his family members, are legally covered and in possession of valid travel documents and work pass and no illegals may be employed in any activities of the farm and any illegals found in the employment of the second party will make this contact void and null.
(7) The second party will co-operate with the first party or his authorized agents to maintain and upkeep the field register and plot numbers particulars and to ensure that the agricultural practices on the use of pesticides, the disposals of empty containers and vessel, are strictly adhered to.
The office of the joint venture business will be located at Lot Ntxx, KM 1, Jalan Kau Luan, Kg. Cinta Mata, Kundasang, Ranau.
The daily, weekly, monthly and seasonal harvests will be carefully recorded and both parties must at month end certified to its accuracies, as provided in the monthly returns in Appendix B herein attached, and such records will be aggregated at 3 months intervals where the yields, either physically if physical stocks are actually taken at time of harvest or based on the farm gate price ruling on the day of harvest.
And in consideration thereto, the first party is entitled to 70 % of the yield and the remaining 30% will be for the second party except where the harvests come from plots on which the first party has provided green house (camps) where the second party is only entitled to 20% and the 80% will go to the first party until such time the full cost of establishing the Geenhouse is fully recovered from the extra 10% .
Both of the parties can cancel the contract at any time of the contract period after serving a one month notice period. The contract can also be cancelled if either of the parties is involved in any sort of fraudulent activity. Renewal of the contract after the expiry date is at the discretion of both the parties. Both the parties have agreed to the above terms and conditions and put their signatures below as proofs of their consent and approval of the above terms and conditions of this joint venture.
Signature of the First Party Signature of the Second Party
Witness: Witness
[ ]
(BM translation)
Kontrak ini telah dibuat pada Desember xx, 2012 antara -xxxx), selanjutnya disebut sebagai "Pihak Pertama", yang berada di kg. Iman, Lomunu Kibabaig, P.O. Box 35, 89.507 Penampang, Sabah, Malaysia dan Encik (Paspor No: xxxxx), selanjutnya disebut sebagai "Pihak Kedua", memiliki sebagai kediamannya di Sabah di KM 1, Jalan Kau Luan, Kg. Cinta Mata, Kundasang, Ranau.
BAHAWASANYA pihak pertama dan pihak kedua pada hari yang disebutkan di atas bersetuju untuk memulakan perniagaan usahasama dalam penanaman satu jenis sayur-sayuran tanah tinggi di atas plot tanah kira-kira 3.5 ekar seperti yang ditandakan pada lakaran di lampiran A di sini dilampirkan.
Kontrak ini akan berkuat kuasa mulai 1 Januari 2013 dan akan sah sehingga 31 Disember, 2013 melainkan diperbaharui.
Kedua-dua pihak bersetuju untuk terma dan syarat berikut:
(1) Pihak pertama adalah bertanggungjawab untuk mendapatkan pajakan tanah dari pelbagai pemilik tanah dan untuk memastikan bahawa sewa bulanan atau tahunan mereka dibayar dengan sewajarnya dalam masa tertentu;
(2) Pihak pertama adalah bertanggungjawab untuk menyediakan dan membekalkan input pertanian benih sayur-sayuran, baja dan semua racun perosak yang diperlukan sebagaimana yang diluluskan oleh Kerajaan dan badan-badan yang mentadbir antarabangsa yang relevan;
(3) Pihak kedua adalah bertanggungjawab untuk menyediakan buruh yang diperlukan bagi keseluruhan projek dari penyediaan tanah, penubuhan nurseri dan penyelenggaraan, pemindahan, merumput, baja dan racun perosak berkala permohonan, pengairan dan menyiram, mempertaruhkan dan mencantas, penuaian, memilih dan membawa hasil tuaian ke pusat pikap, penyimpanan atau pemprosesan, pembersihan, sorting, gabungan, memasukan dalam peti, gabungan atau menimbang dan menjaga dan mendaftar pengeluaran pelbagai daripada plot;
(4) pihak kedua adalah bertanggungjawab untuk menyediakan buruh untuk pembaikan sistem pengairan, tangki air, paip dan kolam air dan pengawasan keselamatan ladang pada setiap masa;
(5) Pihak pertama adalah terutamanya bertanggungjawab untuk pemasaran sayur-sayuran dan di mana perlu, parti kedua mungkin diperlukan untuk membantu dalam mendapatkan pelanggan lama ladang untuk terus membeli dari ladang pada
harga dan terma yang akan dipersetujui dan diluluskan oleh pihak kedua.
(6) pihak kedua adalah bertanggungjawab untuk memastikan bahawa semua pekerja, termasuk ahli keluarga beliau, mengikut undang-undang dilindungi dan
memiliki dokumen perjalanan yang sah dan pas kerja dan tiada PATI boleh digunakan dalam apa-apa aktiviti ladang dan mana-mana pendatang tanpa izin ditemui di pekerjaan pihak kedua akan membuat ini batal kenalan dan batal.
(7) pihak kedua akan bersama-beroperasi dengan pihak pertama atau ejen yang diberi kuasa untuk mengekalkan dan penjagaan daftar ladang dan butir-butir plot-nya dan untuk memastikan bahawa amalan pertanian penggunaan racun perosak, pelupusan bekas kosong dan tong plastic, dipatuhi.
Pejabat perniagaan usahasama akan terletak di Ntxx Lot, KM 1, Jalan Kau Luan, Kg. Cinta Mata, Kundasang, Ranau.
Tuaian harian, mingguan, bulanan dan bermusim akan teliti direkodkan dan kedua-dua pihak mesti pada akhir bulan yang diperakui kepada ketepatan, sebagaimana yang diperuntukkan dalam pulangan bulanan di Lampiran B yang dilampirkan di sini, dan rekod itu akan dijumlahkan pada 3 bulan selang di mana hasil , sama ada secara fizikal jika saham fizikal sebenarnya diambil pada masa penuaian atau berdasarkan ketetapan ladang harga pintu pada hari tuaian.
Dan berhubung pertimbangan, parti pertama adalah berhak kepada 70% hasil dan baki 30% akan menjadi kepunyaan parti kedua kecuali jika tuaian datang dari plot di mana pihak pertama telah disediakan rumah hijau (khemah) di mana pihak kedua hanya berhak kepada 20% dan 80% akan pergi ke parti pertama sehingga masa itu kos penuh mewujudkan Geenhouse pulih sepenuhnya daripada tambahan 10%.
Kedua-dua pihak boleh membatalkan kontrak itu pada bila-bila masa tempoh kontrak selepas berkhidmat tempoh notis satu bulan. Kontrak juga boleh dibatalkan jika sama ada pihak-pihak yang terlibat dalam apa-apa jenis aktiviti penipuan. Pembaharuan kontrak selepas tarikh luput adalah pada budi bicara kedua-dua pihak. Kedua-dua pihak telah bersetuju untuk terma-terma dan syarat-syarat di atas dan meletakkan tandatangan mereka di bawah sebagai bukti persetujuan dan kelulusan terma dan syarat di atas usahasama ini.
Tandatangan Tandatangan
Pihak Pertama
Parti Kedua
His banner over us is Love
Wednesday, December 12, 2012
Tuesday, November 20, 2012
Illegal squatters in Kundasang - high concentration of Illegals doing business on the own
Illegal squatters in Kundasang
There is a growing trend of people illegally planting crops on native land that does not belong to them or just occupying them because the land is vacant. Some of these illegal squatters even threatened land owners with parangs (machetes).
The authorities do not seem to do anything about them and in some cases, they appear to encourage these illegal activities which embolden the squatters.
If Sabah were to move forward into the 21st century, we need to let these people know (even if they are playing an ignorance game) that they are not above the law of the land and most important of all to those who are entrusted to uphold the law and carry out their duties accordingly. So, these squatters must be brought to justice. If the authorities do nothing, of course, these activities will continue and will get out of hand eventually.Do we want a Sabah where no one respects the law?
Kwan
Kota Kinabalu
24 December, 2011
Link: http://insightsabah.gov.my/letters/read/23
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