A
ahollars
Guest
I believe you.Let me ask you a question… I have a friend who is a vegan. She’s one of the most irritating, egotistical, self-important people I’ve ever met. Would it be fair for me to characterize ALL vegans this way?
As a meat producer, a talent given by God, I take great offense when I read hateful and ignorant words like what you wrote above. To listen to them, you’d think I have all my cows duct-taped together in filthy conditions, injecting them with things that could hurt you but so what if it makes me a few bucks.
I’m really sick and tired of reading that kind of attitude from people who probably don’t know one end of a cow from the other.
So here is some information for you. I don’t inject growth hormones in my cows. They eat grass - a natural, renewable, organic product - and they have plenty of room to roam. They have all the water they need and are sheltered at night in individual stalls larger than my bedroom. It takes hours of work every single day to keep their environment clean, free of pests, and safe (for them).
When my cows grow, the emphasis on on health. Why? Because if I send off a cow to the processor that shows signs of illness, even suspected illness, I lose every dime I’ve spent on them. So even if I was the evil sort you cast us all as, I couldn’t make any money doing it. No producer does. The emphasis is on health also so that the cow grows proportionally with strong bones that can support a large muscle structure. If not, the cow will only grow so large and again profit is reduced.
After they grow to a certain size, I send them to a finisher. At a finisher, the cows spend their time indoors being fed a specific diet, typically corn feed and hay, sometimes other roughage, that is formulated to grow muscle AND fat in a specific proportion. This maximizes their “meat” as well as gives it the proper fat content for taste. Too lean and it won’t taste good, too fat and it won’t bring as much money from the processor. The floors are cleaned 3 times a day, and it is inspected regularly to ensure compliance with all laws and standards.
I sell my cows to the finisher on a sliding scale price. He in turn sells them to the processor on a sliding scale contract. For example, the processor offers a contract for 20,000 lbs hanging weight with X amount of it being able to meet or exceed USDA Grade A standards. The finisher then buys cows that he believes he can grow to that size in the right proportions. If he fails, if that meat isn’t the correct grade or percentage, he gets paid less, then I get paid less. So it is incumbent upon everyone in the chain to do everything they can to meet that end goal. Nothing short of strong healthy cows gets you there.
What happens is that some finishers try to take short cuts. Just like in every other business, the people who do this are soon identified and no one does business with them. Usually it’s someone who doesn’t know what they are doing, and anyone can spot them a mile away, I know of no facility like those, and would not risk my income with one. Ever.
Sometimes processors have machine failures and end up holding cows in facilities that are too cramped for long-term holding. Naturally this provides an awesome opportunity for some home made video showing how “the industry” is evil and unfair, uncaring about the animals, etc. I’ve seen people put their dog in a cardboard box to take them to the vet when they had no other suitable container. Would it be fair to photograph that and then conclude “all dog owners are cruel. See this dog… see the box? How can anyone expect a dog to live its life in a box?”
Point is, it is not a widespread phenomena. It happens; so do bank robberies. Those don’t indicate an entire system is corrupt.
If you choose not to eat mine, that’s your choice to make, but it is a lie (that would be a sin, remember) to cast all of us into one bin based on the very few, lowest, most vile people in the industry.
Thanks for reading.