Maybe my version of organic is a little more hardcore than most. If I can't recognize the source product it isn't organic to me. Bottled organic nutrients may be organic as organic can be. But it's the bottle bit I have issue with. I locally source almost 100% of the components I use in my growing. That's part of my connection with the growing process. Hell, even the perlite I use is from mica mined in my area and processed here. I produce 100% of my own chicken, horse, sheep, cow, rabbit & goat manures. I raise my own worms and use all my own castings. The compost I use is from my own garden/yard waste. The bloodmeal I use is from a local meat processor and 100% of what I purchase from him is from blood processed from animals I have raised and sent to him to be processed. I have pounds of crushed egg shell from raising my own chickens. I collect and compost tons of moss harvested from our local irrigation canals gladly delivered to my property by the irrigation district workers. Hell I even make my own fishmeal from harvested carp I process from fish taken during the three bowfishing tournaments I organize here annually. I save all my wood ash from my wood burning stove. About the only thing I use that isn't from here locally are peat, azomite rock dust, epsom salt, agg lime, agg sulfer (from the other side of the state though) and agg gyp...
I am not trying to be high and might nor think my garden is better than anybodies. I do it because I enjoy doing it. I have half of the year off...... so doing stuff like this is how I keep myself occupied and entertained. Turning compost piles by hand can get pretty intense when you are higher than a giraffes ass.....
All that organic rhetoric aside. I do use stuff like Superthrive, bottled kelp extracts and fish emulsions. But if I can help it I like to know where it's coming from.