Make 1 of every 10 items in your cart organic, and you’ll help organic grow.
You’re looking over red bell peppers in the store, when you realize both organic and nonorganic peppers are available. Both the nonorganic and organic peppers look fresh, beautiful and free of bruises and scrapes. You notice that the organic peppers cost a bit more. Which do you choose?
Tight budgets and the limited availability of organic food keep most of us from choosing all organic all the time. But you don’t have to buy organic all the time to make a healthy difference and support organic agriculture.
If you make just 1 of every 10 items in your cart organic, you’ll create demand for more organic food, more organic choices in our stores and more organic farms and farmers in the world.
About 4% of foods and drinks sold in the US are organic. So choosing organic 10% of the time (1 of every 10 items in your cart), helps boost demand.













If it is not organic, I don’t buy it.
Like others, I always buy your yogurt… it’s the best! For fruits and vegetables, I stick with organic for the “dirty dozen” and conventional thereafter.
I buy your yogurts all the time. I also cook and bake with them.
I buy organic products, but look for the USDA organic label. I then choose local produce over a foreign country’s “organic”. A small grocery store I shop when in the area actually lists the origin of the product (name of local farm, organic, IPM, conventially grown) – I LOVE knowing what farms I support!
Please add me to your emailing list. I buy stonyfield products every week. LOVE your yogurt
Hi Brenda -
Thanks so much for being such a big Stonyfield fan! We’d love to have you on our newsletter list but as we have a few different types of emails, it’s easiest if you stop by our site and sign up to select which communications you prefer to receive. Here is the link:
http://www.stonyfield.com/user/newsletters
Thanks again,
Stonyfield Amy
I buy organic as often as I can afford it – but I also started my backyard garden so I could afford to eat pesticide-free goodies. 10 years ago, when I moved to my in-town house with a little yard, I decided to plant only edible plants. Although my garden is small (really), I manage to grow (and preserve) veggies, raspberries, currants, cherries, grapes, elderberries, apricots, and figs.
Like others, I buy organic as often as my budget permits; however, I always buy dairy and eggs that are organic.
I noticed that all the comments are from the female gender- we ladies have such a impact on the health of our nation. The hand that rocks the cradle rules the world- however right now the agro- business of this country may just be ruining and ruling our nation- To me it is insane that all food is not carefully and “organically” grown! Are our national food supplier actual murderers? Money seems to rule both their and our choices- on both sides of this question.
Should not love of neighbor have some importance in our land? I should not sell any product that I would not want for my own children and myself.
I always buy organic, and if I can’t get it organically grown, I don’t eat it.
I buy organic as often as I can. More than casually, but not hardcore. Unfortunately, budget does not allow for all organic. I do however, buy the “dirty dozen” organic all the time. I try to buy mostly organic for my son, as he has a “clean slate” so to speak. Wish I could by all organic, all the time. Thank you Stoneyfield for giving me reasonabley priced choices. Buy your stuff all the time. I shop at a certain grocery chain because of their organic choices.
Honestly, it depends on price these days. Used to be hardcore but no job for a while =not much organic besides dairy products.
I buy organic products most of the time. Sometimes budget or place of shopping do not allow for organic shopping. It is common sense and healthier to eat organically raised fruits/veggies/meats.
Please add a choice in the poll to reflect “whenever choice or budget allows”. That would be my vote.
I buy mostly fruits and veggies, and dairy products organic. I buy organic for my son about 85% of the time. It is hard because he has egg and nut allergies. We belong to a CSA and I help out at the farm too to learn about organic farming once a week. I have done that for several years. We also have our own garden as well.
I WISH I could find organic red bell peppers for “somewhat” more than conventional. However, when they are priced at MORE THAN TWICE the conventional, my budget can’t handle it, and I go for the hydroponically grown instead. On the other hand, I ALWAYS buy organic apples. My usual rule of thumb – I will pay up to half again the conventional price for organic.
My family only eats non-organic food when we don’t have access to any organic food, such as when we are traveling in more remote places or at a wedding that isn’t serving organic food. We are probably 99.9% organic.
I buy as much organic as i can so many people are dying from cancer its from what they put in our food today i grow my own food so i know what im eating
I buy all organic that I can. Always dairy, meat and most fruits and veggies. When I was growing up most everything was organic,(I am a grandma)and we raised our food. I did the same with my family, but now it is very different. I definitely don’t like the additives.