Monday, June 1, 2009

June 1 Round Up


And by round up I don't mean chemicals nor do I mean cattle - although both could apply at some point or another. This is the news that is in the headlines this morning, regarding farm animals and their welfare, as well as other farm animal related news. Check out the links, comment back and let's talk!

California lawmakers rally on animal welfare issues

Farm Animal Council of Sasktachewan Launches New Teaching Tool

UK Asking for Better Pre-Slaughter Welfare for Birds

More Space for Ohio Farm Animals? 

More on Antibiotic Use In Animals - the Debate Continues

Dutch Pig Poop Feeds Grid - Green or Brown power?

More Than Laws Uphold Animal Welfare
Important to Note: In Manitoba you may call 945-8000 to report any concerns over the welfare of animals or to arrange the surrender of your animals should you be unable or unwilling to care for them any longer.  There is NO EXCUSE for abuse and neglect of animals.

Not related to farm animal welfare but an excellent example of when the hard choice (euthanasia) is also the right choice when it comes to the welfare of animals.

International Collaboration Centre Focus on Animal Welfare



Friday, May 29, 2009

Think Safe, Work Safe, Play Safe


I, along with my furry sidekick Feathers, attended and presented at the annual Safety Day in Altona.  It is geared towards kids and being safe on the farm mostly - equipment to animals and everything in between.  It got me thinking how much we have to teach people about being safe (yes, that includes our farmers! or sometimes especially our farmers)...and I wanted to share some links about safety and well being on the farm.

Farm Safety Program is a grant for farm families to build safe play areas for thier children or grand children. We have accessed this program and built a great safe place for our son and his friends.  You must check it out...pass it along and share!

Manitoba Farmers With Disabilities is a great organization to help educate farmers and farm families about safety and to help farmers return to their vocation after an accident.  Neil has a great story to share too!

Safe Manitoba is a great group that does a lot to educate Manitoban's (and everyone) about safety. Their farm safety resources are excellent and get the point across. Worth looking at and sharing.

Great resources for your mental health, and some great folks to talk to when you need a trained ear of someone who knows farming and understands the stress that is farming.  Call or email - reach out someone is there for you! Promise...


Wednesday, May 27, 2009

Let's talk turkey...and welfare...




When video comes out like that is linked below, there are no excuses or rationals that can explain away what a viewer sees. Without even a need for context, anyone can tell that something isn't right in this video.  And the Canadian's for the Ethical Treatment of Food Animals would like you to lobby for change by the company, to the CFIA and through legislation.  

Noble goals for welfare but as always the question arises - did anyone do anything about the abuses or questionable practices they were seeing while making their video? Did they make a call, which in Manitoba would go directly to a provincial Welfare Vet?  Did they raise a ruckus that day, or the next on the news? Uh, well, no.  The reason?  The more bad stuff you can pack into one report the more of an 'impact' you'll have.  Well, uh, no...not really...because people who can think, and do think, will ask what you did for THOSE ANIMALS on THAT DAY...and the answer would be NOTHING.  

No excuses for anyone either on the (mis)handling side nor on the videoing side - neither were holding the welfare of any animal to a higher standard that day or any before or after it.  The truly sad thing is a report like this will lose credibility with those who could affect change for the very reasons stated above - you didn't do anything when you could make a difference, so why should you be believed right now?

We should speak up for welfare, and many groups do just that on a daily basis for all animals - companion, farmed and research.  We need to speak out for those without a voice regardless of what animal they are - but we should not wait to compile a report or make a political statement or do something that will catch the eye of the media. We need to pick up the phone and make a call to show that we care - right here, right now. 

As much as I hate the anamorphisic attitude that animals are people in animal suits, I have to ask - if it was your child being thrown onto a school bus would you video it and make a report about school bus abuse when they graduate or would you be calling right there, right then?  The latter I would fervently hope and pray...and would you not do the same for any other child, senior or person, pet or creature?  So WHY NOT for a farm animal?  Think about that...and next time you have a chance make the call!


Manitoba's Animal Care Act (There are provincial and federal statutes to Google - get busy!)

Canadian Food Inspection Agency - Animal Transportation Regulations

Friday, May 22, 2009

Week Enders

It was a short work week for us Canucks, and a long weekend ahead for our US friends but from the links below you'll see for some it was a busy week!  More later, have to get to work on some other items for the 'to-do' list!

HSUS Sets Sights On Ohio

Gateway to Animal Welfare - from the U.N. 
(Food & Agriculture Organization of the United Nations)

USDA Faces Farmer Concerns in Texas

Nova Scotia and other Canadian Provinces Rank High

Cow Injured in Knife Attack (true!)

NZ Minister Orders Review of Welfare Code for Pigs

TO Chemist Says "Regulate Farm Populations"

Alberta Farmer: Cull Entire Herd, Help Industry


Thursday, April 30, 2009

Guest Commentary - Dan Murphy

My friend, Dan Murphy, author, speaker and industry commentator, as agreed to join us at Chore Time every now and again. This is his piece on the 'Swine Flu' outbreak, just got it last night.

Thanks Dan!
~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~

Flu outbreak exposes strengths, weaknesses among producers, policymakers

By Dan Murphy, industry commentator (www.themeatofthematter.com)

With the spread of a virulent new virus across North America – and the fist U.S. fatality Tuesday – there is growing concern among meat industry leaders about how this affects public perceptions of their business, and ultimately, their operations.

From a medical and public health perspective, the response to date has been most gratifying. Unlike other recent public health emergencies that occurred during the Bush administration, the federal government’s communications and reactions have been sharp, timely and focused on effective investigation and mitigation strategies.

That’s a welcome change.

Internationally, the UN’s World Health Organization has also responded decisively, raising the pandemic alert level to Phase 4 (“confirmed person-to-person spread of a new influenza virus able to cause community-level” outbreaks”). Domestically, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention issued warnings against non-essential travel to Mexico (now there’s some real genius advice – or as comedian Hal Sparks suggests, “Wash your hands, don’t rub your eyes and avoid eating a pulled pork sandwich in Cancun while sitting next to somebody blowing their nose into a bandana.”) and began stockpiling personal protective equipment, respiratory protection devices and antiviral drugs such as oseltamivir (Tamiflu) and zanamivir.

The good news is that this influenza A-H1N1 virus appears to be susceptible to those drugs, and should the spread of the disease widen, treatment would likely help most victims recover without incident.

Now for the bad news.

Despite the seriousness of this situation, very few industry groups have gotten out front of the news with their external communications. Here’s one suggestion:

STOP CALLING IT SWINE FLU.

Even the UN boarded that bus this week, noting that the term “swine flu” implies that you can catch the disease from consuming pork products. Reality is that this virus is a unique mutation that combines biological material from human, porcine and avian influenza viruses.

Granted, it’s difficult to wean the media off using of precise medical terms (like “octomom”), but certainly industry shouldn’t be referring to this virus as the equivalent of mad cow disease. “The flu outbreak,” or the use of the technical name for this virus – H1N1 – would be a far better choice.

And speaking of that hysteria, it is time for industry to start talking about the critical importance of biosecurity. (In an eerie parallel to the dairy cow born in Canada but diagnosed with BSE in Mabton, Wash., in 2003, the young boy who became the first U.S. fatality in Houston was actually a Mexican national who had only recently returned to Texas). The spread of virtually every deadly zoonotic disease, such as foot-and-mouth, is exacerbated when the prevailing production model is small farms, outdoor operations and lots of buying and selling of individual animals among local farmers and producers.

In other words, every practice demonized by the anti-industry activists – confinement production, centralized systems, the use of specialty growers – turns out to be precisely the way that such outbreaks could and should be controlled. This is the time to do some serious consumer and media education.

If ordinary reporters and producers can eventually get their arms arou

nd the idea that BSE prions are confined to neurological tissue (brain and spinal cord), which North American don’t consume, they can also begin to internalize the concept of biosecurity as a series of measures that are positive with respect to public health, if not perceived animal welfare.

Remember foot-and-mouth in the U.K.? The widespread practice of swapping and trading animals among England’s smaller farms was exactly how the outbreak outran efforts to contain it. And with BSE, the biggest problem investigators had with the initial reference animal was trying to figure out which herds and what farmers had bought and sold the cow prior to her positive diagnosis.

This outbreak will get worse before it gets better. Thankfully, public health authorities are rapidly gearing up with measures that, even if they’re not needed, will help make us all safer should an actual pandemic occur.

Meanwhile, industry should be working equally hard to communicate the idea that this virus likely originated due to the “natural” production conditions typical of less developed agricultural models, such as Mexico, and that the value of modern confinement production systems should now be understood less in terms of greedy producers making obscene profits and more in terms of protecting our non-farm population from the occasional, though potentially deadly, eruption of a new zoonotic disease organism.

The way pork producers operate in North America is designed to keep pigs safe, and humans even safer.

Let’s get busy and share that thought.