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SheepShed
Joined: 08 Nov 2006 Posts: 332 Location: In the middle of a Welsh forest
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Ty Gwyn
Joined: 22 Sep 2010 Posts: 4613 Location: Lampeter
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Posted: Thu Nov 04, 10 10:47 am Post subject: |
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[quote="Milo"]
Ty Gwyn wrote: |
If eating a Vegan diet,makes around your eyes dark and a pale complection,thats gaunt,give me a Pork chop anyday. |
This is most peculiar. I understand things haven't been going too well lately in Barack Obama's Ty Gwyn either.
I was referring to the fact that them 2 men looked un-healthy,
Imagine the UK on a Vegan diet,It would be the land of the Living Dead
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For someone that harps on about Subsidies to hill farmers,which as Rob mentioned are now Acreage based not Animal number based, Does he Not know about Set aside,where Arable farmers on some of the best land in the UK are paid Not to plant food. |
I'm not unfamiliar with the concept of set aside - as applied by the EU it's a very good example of costly mismanagement. How might you link that to anything in the video?
Not to Anything in the Video,just to your Blinkered ramblings
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Its clear you have No idea about Care of the land,can you imagine what a Hill farm bordering a Mountain would look like with out Livestock,it would revert to Mountain,then you can go and pick your Wimberries. |
I've no need to imagine, I do know what a mountain(side) looks like when the livestock are removed / reduced / fenced out. This summer and over previous years I've observed planted trees returning vigorously to the Applecross peninsula. Last summer I was around the top of Cwm Cywarch where zero-grazing has caught on and farmed livestock are now to be found only in some, but not all, of the big ugly barns. There's almost no sign at all of any stock on the hill.
Where is this Applecross Peninsula and Cwm Cywarch
I know a farm not far from me that Fattened 25,000 lambs a year in large sheds,these lambs are purchased from Cumbria and Scotland,as well as thier own ,that don`t finish off grass,thier own ewes are out on the hill,except when thier brought in for shearing,dosing etc. |
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Rob R
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 31902 Location: York
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Posted: Thu Nov 04, 10 11:16 am Post subject: |
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Milo wrote: |
Rob R wrote: |
Noones sheep eat anyone's taxes in this country any longer - subsidy is now paid per hectare, not per animal, so you could grow anything you like on it, it makes no difference. |
So it might well include sheep. But the subsidy is still considered necessary regardless of the relative inefficiency with which a subsidised upland farmer produces food(s) for us while his livestock prevent natural regeneration of species which would (eventually) flourish in the absence of farmed livestock? And year after year the nutrients leach from the soil and the (petroleum-based) fertilisers wash down the rivers because we've got it so badly wrong. |
It might include sheep, or it might include a vegan organic farm both are equal and subsidy can't be used as a stick to beat sheep farmers with any more than any other type of farmer now.
I just happened to be reading a farming paper last night in which a FWAG officer a little further North than here was advocating that cattle should return to the uplands to increase biodiversity. In the same article he also referred to areas of upland bog that were fenced off to 'protect' them from grazing livestock. Sadly biodiversity had declined as the coarser grasses and bracken had taken over and smothered out the more delicate species. Yes there was overgrazing when headage payemnts encouraged farmers to keep more animals but at this present time that is outdated - the biggest threat facing our uplands is undergrazing. We don't have vast herds of large wild herbivores in this country, but if we did they'd also be eating that guy's cabbages and there ain't no parasitic wasp that will kill a deer.
Petroleum based fertilisers are a big problem, but again their overuse is becoming outdated as they become more expensive and less effective (through overuse) it is far less economical to keep using more. Again that is not proportional to livestock - we can compare their use between organic and non-organic farming, but not between non-organic livestock farming and stockless organic farming. You need to assess the comparable systems and organic farming can be mixed, livestock or stockless (arable, as it is otherwise known).
Milo wrote: |
Oddly enough, I don't think (livestock) farmers are 100% to blame for what I perceive to be a monumental mess. Traditionalists though they tend to be, farmers are very capable of change, but very unlikely to make any changes unless the government, or the supermarkets - little difference between the two - head them in a new direction.
When the rainforests can be valued at $5 trillion https://ind.pn/9uOoeW, what price the reinstatement and continuous conservation of oak / mixed woodland on every slope (steep enough to be prone to run-off when ploughed) up to 2,000ft od throughout Wales, for example? Or is it appropriate to use our uplands to farm destructive herbivores for meat we don't need and wool we don't use? |
Herbivores aren't destructive, it is the management (or lack of) that makes them destructive, and that goes for both livestock and arable farmers, including your man there on the video.
You, perhaps, don't need meat nor use wool but many of us do. Some of us prefer not to use the petrochemical-produced materials that vegans rely upon, and wool is about the most sustainable renewable fibre known to man.
In my biodiverse organic managed grazing system I can produce highly nutritious protein food that propels itself, feeds itself, reproduces itself, weeds, fertilises &, to a certain degree, sells itself. It is only the fact that I'm not allowed to walk it to the abattoir/it can't be killed on the farm that means that it must be transported by motor vehicle when it reaches the end of it's life.
I'm not going to shoot the vegan organic farmer down, because he had many good points to make that we all can learn from, but using his Zetor in several shots means that he is reliant upon some diesel fuel as are we - the only difference being that he didn't, and wouldn't, use an ox to replace some of the diesel fuel used in the system.
I'll try and take a look at the latter half of the film that my connection wouldn't allow me to yesterday but if you want to know more about what can be achieved with animals, in terms of food, power, fertility and biodiversity, feel free to ask or visit. |
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T.G
Joined: 13 Sep 2009 Posts: 7280 Location: Somewhere you're not
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Mrs R
Joined: 15 Aug 2008 Posts: 7202
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Rob R
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 31902 Location: York
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Rob R
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 31902 Location: York
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Mrs R
Joined: 15 Aug 2008 Posts: 7202
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snozzer
Joined: 19 Oct 2006 Posts: 296 Location: The Centre of Britian
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snozzer
Joined: 19 Oct 2006 Posts: 296 Location: The Centre of Britian
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SheepShed
Joined: 08 Nov 2006 Posts: 332 Location: In the middle of a Welsh forest
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Treacodactyl Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 25795 Location: Jumping on the bandwagon of opportunism
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Rob R
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 31902 Location: York
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Posted: Thu Nov 04, 10 6:22 pm Post subject: |
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There are no two ways about it, the modern intensive poultry industry is horrible as is the waste and the produce that it generates. But Mr Milo was attributing public taxes towards supporting damage by animals, however poultry is largely where it is because that was one of the sectors that didn't receive subsidy to get to where they have today. He was citing sheep, which account for 2% of the slaughterings, whereas the sector that contributes most, a whacking 88%, towards his 'shocking' figures, were unsubsidised.
Without birds and fish the daily slaughterings are 103,200 or 0.63 animals per year per person. Of those three animal types, proportions based upon their percentage of the total numbers slaughtered and at 20kg finished lamb carcass, 45kg pork and 200kg of beef, each person is responsible for consuming 28.2kg of 'meat' annually. Of course it is not all meat, there are bones, fat and connective tissue in there, but you get the gist. |
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gil Downsizer Moderator
Joined: 08 Jun 2005 Posts: 18415
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Rob R
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 31902 Location: York
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