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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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Tavascarow
Joined: 06 Aug 2006 Posts: 8407 Location: South Cornwall
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Hairyloon
Joined: 20 Nov 2008 Posts: 15425 Location: Today I are mostly being in Yorkshire.
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Nick
Joined: 02 Nov 2004 Posts: 34535 Location: Hereford
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Nick
Joined: 02 Nov 2004 Posts: 34535 Location: Hereford
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Tavascarow
Joined: 06 Aug 2006 Posts: 8407 Location: South Cornwall
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Nick
Joined: 02 Nov 2004 Posts: 34535 Location: Hereford
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Rob R
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 31902 Location: York
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Tavascarow
Joined: 06 Aug 2006 Posts: 8407 Location: South Cornwall
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Rob R
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 31902 Location: York
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Posted: Mon May 30, 16 2:05 pm Post subject: |
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Tavascarow wrote: |
Rob R wrote: |
I'm not exactly following your logic here though, why is it not OK to tell people they need to eat more sustainable meat, but it's fine to offer it as street food in a more convenient form that makes it easier for them to eat more? (and still possibly go home and eat Tesco chicken) |
I've always been a supporter of all sustainable food production.
Western society "as a whole" needs to eat less meat for the sake of the planets biodiversity & the climate.
& as this thread proves to reduce the prevalence of antibiotic resistant microbes.
But I've never said your methods are wrong.
Healthy food comes in all forms from your grass reared beef & lamb to the fresh salad on an organic allotment to the wild watercress I'm about to harvest for soup tonight.
Saying eat more sustainable meat whilst ignoring the rest is wrong IMHO. |
I don't ignore the rest, and I don't believe we need to eat less as a whole, providing my methods were applied more widely we could produce vastly more. The one limiting factor on producing more this way is the size of the market.
Whether you or I are wrong is irrelevant though, as I don't advocate eating anything other than that which can be sustainably produced so you are in no danger of exceeding that amount. However, if farmers like me aren't encouraged to produce more there is absolutely no incentive for other farmers to follow. In fact I'm more likely to follow them because I need to make a living.
Diversification, if you have all the resources available, may be a good way to make money out of 'spare' assets, but that doesn't help sustainable food production, especially if you don't have those spare resources available. Of course you could set yourself up to buy those assets but then the organic farm becomes a second priority and really unnecessary.
As a farmer the eat less idea is soul destroying when you've gone to all the efforts to do exactly as you are told you should be doing only for your product to be regarded as something we shouldn't be producing at all. Fair enough if you're average joe public don't want to buy it, afterall they don't realise how important it is, but for conservationists and animal welfarists to, basically, say the same thing, only from a different angle, seems counterproductive. The only viable way forward for the farmer is to join the masses, or move away from farming. |
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Tavascarow
Joined: 06 Aug 2006 Posts: 8407 Location: South Cornwall
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Rob R
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 31902 Location: York
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Tavascarow
Joined: 06 Aug 2006 Posts: 8407 Location: South Cornwall
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Rob R
Joined: 28 Oct 2004 Posts: 31902 Location: York
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Posted: Tue May 31, 16 8:34 pm Post subject: |
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Maybe it's different in Yorkshire but I've never known anyone to overuse antibiotics in dairying, most are scared stiff of getting any money docked in fines and having the cost of the antibiotics in the first place. The bigger problem with the bigger dairies is staff who mess up and let antibiotic milk go in the tank and not own up to it.
When I talk about wild ruminants that's exactly what I mean - there used to be loads, and now there are few, so the difference has been made up for by cattle. Instead of measuring just the output of modern cattle, we should be measuring the difference between that and methane produced by the former vast herds of ruminants. And measure we should be doing, relying on estimates doesn't account for basic maths and the rule that you can't destroy or create carbon - all emissions come, originally, from fossil reserves, soils or the atmosphere. We just need to ensure that we're taking as little as possible from the former and taking as much as possible from the latter, and putting a bit back into the soil. |
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