More work pictures
Oct. 3rd, 2005 11:58 amIt so happens that the wildlife sanctuary where I work includes a traditional New England working farm. (Well, it's really a demonstration farm: we make money with it, but it's supported by the Sanctuary Society. Its purpose is to show how a small scale farm can operate without a negative impact on the environment.)
This was the first day that Emma, the new calf, arrived at the farm purchased from a farm in New Hampshire. These education staff members are trying to comfort her and get her used to the new place.




Our visitors, especially children, get to learn that what becomes tasty starts off as very very cute!

This was the first day that Emma, the new calf, arrived at the farm purchased from a farm in New Hampshire. These education staff members are trying to comfort her and get her used to the new place.




Our visitors, especially children, get to learn that what becomes tasty starts off as very very cute!

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Date: 2005-10-03 04:12 pm (UTC)Poor piggies. I love pork but it makes me so guilty. How can I eat a pink dog?
I love the way their ears are scalloped. That's for ID, right? Do they get any kind of pain meds when they do that? I wondered about it when we were at the state fair.
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Date: 2005-10-03 04:29 pm (UTC)Yes, the scalloped ears are for ID, done at the farm they were born at, not mine. I don't know if they get pain meds when the chunks are cut out of their ears, but I doubt it. It seems to me that most animals raised for food aren't ever anethetized for anything, but I could be wrong.
At a large farm, the animals are just the raw material for your products. But at a small one, the animals' suffering is seen as unpleasant but part of life on the farm. Little rubber donuts around sheep tails and testicles, electro-cauterized horns, pig tusks clipped off, and so on. At least it's all done mindfully, by people who feel for the animals, and enjoy working with them.
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Date: 2005-10-03 04:29 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-10-03 04:52 pm (UTC)Personally, I like the big, happy, big, complete pink ears I see at the sanctuary where I work. :)
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Date: 2005-10-03 04:53 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-10-03 05:19 pm (UTC)Have the best
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Date: 2005-10-03 05:52 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-10-03 08:11 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-10-04 12:14 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2005-10-04 08:53 am (UTC)That's pretty amazing, that she thought that was okay. Lobsters are a really funny special case. They don't need to be slaughtered or butchered--cooking them and killing them takes place concurrently--so no messy beheadings, guttings or bleedings. And yet for some reason they don't violate the North American insect-eating taboo.
There probably would be more that one protestor if she brought a chicken in for the same purpose, huh?
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Date: 2005-10-04 04:56 pm (UTC)These are preschool kids. It's extremely extremely extremely very much difficult to get them to eat in the first place. I can tell you first hand that any interference with this will be not at all appreciated.
Preschool kids are historically not very good at making judgements based on anything besides their guts. Don't take advantage of that for your own agenda. If you teach the kids that animals are feeling creatures then, when it's the appropriate time, the kids will be able to make a choice on their own.
It's the parents choice to introduce whatever dogma they choose into their childs life. Not your job. At all.
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Date: 2005-10-04 11:56 pm (UTC)Fortunately, I teach in Cambridge, where vegetarianism is practically the law! The school itself has an ovo-lacto vegetarian menu. And all the kids I work with are very hearty eaters who love fresh veggies and fruits and rice and pasta. So there will be no kids starving to death.
What's funny is that today I found a book on the shelves in the school that was called Cows That Type. It's about some cows who find a typewriter and start sending letters to the farmer (who owns them) demanding to be treated better or they won't produce any more milk. The farmer finally acquiecses when the chickens go on strike, too. What's even funnier is that nearly all the kids said that they had this book at home already.
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Date: 2005-10-05 12:01 am (UTC)Hmmm, we have snails as a "class pet". I wonder what the kids and teachers would think if I suggested we eat them! (Wild edibles!)
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Date: 2005-10-05 12:29 pm (UTC)That book is hilarious!