Click photo to enlarge
Destination Organic owners Lyn Williamson and Stu Burt are
looking for people who want to try organics. Photo by Jude
Gillies.
The owners of a Queenstown business are putting their
money where their mouths are, to dispel the perception that
organic produce is more expensive than non-organic.
Destination Organic owners Stu Burt and Lyn Williamson are
putting up $2000 to test their theory that eating and
shopping organically is no more expensive than non-organic,
and better for you.
And they want to give people the chance to see for themselves
why they think eating organically is so good.
After switching to eating organically a few years ago after
his wife got cancer, Mr Burt maintained the change changed
his life.
"I did this [open Destination Organic] because I couldn't buy
decent organic products on a regular basis in Central Otago.
"We all get stressed but we don't think about the stress we
put on our bodies by all this stuff in our bodies."
Recent research showed more than a third all cancers were
caused by food people ate, he said.
"I've been organic as much as possible for three years and I
haven't had a day off sick. Before that every winter you'd
guarantee I'd get some sort of bad flu."
Mrs Williamson said eating organically gave people the best
guarantee of having food that was not overloaded with
pesticides and chemicals and was full of valuable
antioxidants. Eating organically also meant eating
seasonally, with a balance of year-round qualities in the
produce, she added.
"Basically, you're eating what your granny did."
But the pair said they wanted Queenstown people to have a
chance to judge the benefits for themselves, which is why
they have come up with their novel idea of winning a month's
worth of organic shopping.
They want to find two families to be an organic test case.
They will track their shopping for four weeks, keeping note
of their expenditure, and will then subsidise their shopping
at Destination Organic by $150 a week for four weeks, to make
a comparison between the costs and benefits of both organic
and non-organic products.