Posts tagged ‘fed beef’

How grass fed beef with mob grazing cut greenhouse gases

grass fed beef cattle How grass fed beef with mob grazing cut greenhouse gasesNow, this takes into account the paradigm that you believe (or tolerate) the idea that some gases can create a “greenhouse effect” and add or detract from global temperatures. Jury is still out – and has been for some time. Another discussion, another time…

But Time Magazine recently did an article covering how some “greenies” on the East Coastal have decided to get into raising beef in order to save the environment. Not just any of these academic megalopolis types, but real bona-fide environmentally-resonsible authors who walk their talk:

None of this would be remarkable if it weren’t for the fact that [these] …are two of the most highly regarded organic-vegetable farmers in the country: Eliot Coleman wrote the bible of organic farming, The New Organic Grower, and Barbara Damrosch is the Washington Post’s gardening columnist. At a time when a growing number of environmental activists are calling for an end to eating meat, this veggie-centric power couple is beginning to raise it.

Turns out that the studies these radical activists are quoting (and I have a great deal more on how bogus thse are in a later post) are actually missing part of the data.

When you spend all that fuel raising corn or other grains, and then all that fuel transporting this grain to feedlots, then coop up animals in unhealthy conditions where their manure ferments and creates more gases – guess what? You’ve just made a ton of all sorts of these gasses to get your beef.

Now, grass fed beef, especially in mob grazing, takes a different approach. Perennial grass consumes these gasses. Beef, when rotated in a managed grazing program (especially in high-density mob grazing) actually stimulate this growth by cropping, fertilizing, aerating, and cultivating that pasture so that it actually gets healthier and lusher – making it grow more and consume more of these “greenhouse gasses”. The article covers this:

“Much of the carbon footprint of beef comes from growing grain to feed the animals, which requires fossil-fuel-based fertilizers, pesticides, transportation,” says Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma. “Grass-fed beef has a much lighter carbon footprint.” Indeed, although grass-fed cattle may produce more methane than conventional ones, their net emissions are lower because they help the soil sequester carbon.

When you add that in with local processing (not trucked hundreds of miles), you then cut the net gas level enormously.

You also have to take into account that a lot of the studies producing this data are very, very flawed. But I’ll go into that later.

Some interesting quotes out of this article :

By many standards, pastured beef is healthier. That’s certainly the case for the animals involved; grass feeding obviates the antibiotics that feedlots are forced to administer in order to prevent the acidosis that occurs when cows are fed grain. But it also appears to be true for people who eat cows. Compared with conventional beef, grass-fed is lower in saturated fat and higher in omega-3s, the heart-healthy fatty acids found in salmon.

But the activist radical vegans will argue that if you don’t eat meat, it will save you eating those hormones and so the greenhouse gasses as well. Time rebuts this:

To Allan Savory, the economies-of-scale mentality ignores the role that grass-fed herbivores can play in fighting climate change. A former wildlife conservationist in Zimbabwe, Savory once blamed overgrazing for desertification. “I was prepared to shoot every bloody rancher in the country,” he recalls. But through rotational grazing of large herds of ruminants, he found he could reverse land degradation, turning dead soil into thriving grassland. (See TIME’s special report on the environment.)

Like him, Coleman now scoffs at the environmentalist vogue for vilifying meat eating. “The idea that giving up meat is the solution for the world’s ills is ridiculous,” he says at his Maine farm. “A vegetarian eating tofu made in a factory from soybeans grown in Brazil is responsible for a lot more CO2 than I am.” A lifetime raising vegetables year-round has taught him to value the elegance of natural systems. Once he and Damrosch have brought in their livestock, they’ll “be able to use the manure to feed the plants, and the plant waste to feed the animals,” he says. “And even though we can’t eat the grass, we’ll be turning it into something we can.”

As I’ve said, there’s a lot more to bring to light in this area. I hope to do more this week on this, as the research has been stacking up and needs an outlet.

For now, check out the Time article and decide for yourself.

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Grass Fed Beef tastes better and is more healthy – unless it's been inspected in a Federal packing plant

grass fed beef cattle How grass fed beef with mob grazing cut greenhouse gases

Choice cuts of Grass Fed Beef taste better and are healthier for you – unless it’s Federally inspected, and then even Obama can’t keep you safe, despite all his bail-outs.

I’ve been assembling my notes on mob grazing and grassfed beef in order to get this all lined up for work this winter.

Some salient points:

  • It appears our e coli problems with beef were first noticed as coming from a corn-raised feedlot setup and has since been also noticed in grassfed beef.
  • But the trick is in how it’s processed, not what’s in that animal.
  • All the infections we’ve had in this country (as far as current research shows) were each USDA inspected.

One interesting quote comes from a NYT article, which tells about a person surviving the e coli infection to live a partially-paralyzed existence:

The frozen hamburgers that the Smiths ate, which were made by the food giant Cargill, were labeled “American Chef’s Selection Angus Beef Patties.” Yet confidential grinding logs and other Cargill records show that the hamburgers were made from a mix of slaughterhouse trimmings and a mash-like product derived from scraps that were ground together at a plant in Wisconsin. The ingredients came from slaughterhouses in Nebraska, Texas and Uruguay, and from a South Dakota company that processes fatty trimmings and treats them with ammonia to kill bacteria.

Four states and two countries. Nice work. All USDA inspected to begin with – but that infected manure found it’s way into the beef somehow.  Not to mention that the “fatty trimmings” are treated with ammonia before you get a chance to eat it…

Look: know your farmer and know your processor. Your safest route is to trace your own beef.

And also, it’s actually cheaper to buy it direct from the farmer. Ask Joel Salatin.

This week’s articles are pretty interesting along this line:

Grass Fed Beef Still Has E. Coli Danger : Eat. Drink. Better. by John Chappell The benefits of organic and grass fed beef have been well documented. Numerous studies have shown that organic and grass fed beef has significantly higher levels of Omega 3s and lower levels of saturated fats than conventionally …

A Myth of Grass-Fed Beef « by Phil Reid This claim, which has become a mantra in sustainable agriculture, is more often than not dispatched to rally support for grass-fed beef—a supposedly healthier and more environmentally sound way to feed cattle—which is to say, …

Grass Fed Beef Education Week by Annette This weeks postings will be about grass fed beef. We have grass fed beef for sale. We tried the hamburgers tonight and they are Tasty! The meat is very lean and has a great beef flavor. We’ve been told that grass fed beef needs to be …

What Ever Happened to the Venerable Hamburger? Huffington Post (blog) – ?2 hours ago? Choose organic meat, or grass fed beef and you’ll be glad you learned to make your own chopped meat, because while the flavor is flawless, this meat can be …

Choice cuts: Dungeness farm putting grass-fed beef on local market Peninsula Daily – Diane Urbani de la Paz – ?Jan 31, 2010? Photo by Diane Urbani de la Paz/Peninsula Daily News LOCALLY RAISED GRASS-FED beef is available from the Clark family farm, 322 Clark Road, Sequim, …

Pasture to plate | Area consumers’ desire for local foods spurs an entrepreneur. The Register-Guard – Tim Christie – ?Jan 30, 2010? Mike Wooley, owner of Long’s, said the grain-fed beef from Oregon Natural Meats will complement the grass-fed beef he carries. …

Beware the Myth of Grass-Fed BeefCows raised at pasture are not immune to … Slate – James E. McWilliams – ?Jan 22, 2010? Grass-fed beef should account for 10 percent of America’s beef consumption overall by 2016, she says—a more than threefold increase from 2006. …

When a mob is profitable – grazing because they like it that way. I’ve been doing my homework lately on mob grazing and Missouri grass fed beef cattle – so thought to let you know what I’ve come up with. Here’s some PDF’s for you…

Not just a board game: Live for Others in order to Improve Your Own Life Some rules to moving your lifestyle choice pieces – you only help yourself by helping others. Any success you look for, find for others first – and then yours arrives faster…

More about moving to Mob Grazing from conventional farming Still working to improve the profits on my grass fed beef cattle. Here’s a post about moving to mob grazing from conventional practices, some tips and results…

Eat your own cooking, drink your own Kool-Aid: part 3 How the government has it wrong – everything valuable isn’t always taxable. Why the poor in pocket aren’t necessarily poor in spirit. Living affluent cheaply…

Making Missouri Mob Grazing pay – a laundry list Some pointers from a 2000 mob grazing presentation by Greg Judy of Columbia, Missouri – how to raise grass-fed beef cattle simply and cheaply.

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Thanks for visiting my blog and reading this entry.
If you’ve found it valuable, please consider donating via PayPal to enable my continuing research.

Or – buy a book from my “Go Thunk Yourself” bookstore.

Our latest upcoming release, “Freedom Is — (period.)”


Whatchadoin? Oh, I dunno — stuff.

grass fed beef cattle How grass fed beef with mob grazing cut greenhouse gases

So what am I up to?

Oh, other than saving the world, I check my cows every day. Run the farm, which right now is checking on loggers who are hell-bent on making ruts and then apologizing and filling them in as best they can. And people who want firewood who come every now and then, but not effectively removing the tree tops the loggers left.

And chuckling with myself when I take everything so seriously and being critical of others.

I’m in the middle, or mostly done, with promoting “Get Your Self Scam Free” and having someone edit “Freedom Is – (period)” for me. More of a collaboration.

But next on my list after that promotion is to write up what I’ve researched on mob grazing and grass fed beef.

Of course, my day job in designing web pages goes on apace. Slow over the holidays, but at least I’m working and getting paid for it.

When that Freedom book is finished, it will be published to Amazon and maybe I’ll start giving talks on it or something. Lots of promotion to do on it, both online and otherwise.

After that, I’m done with writing about self-help, which has taken most of my lifetime so far. Once I made that trip and discovered Levenson and his Sedona Method, everything was over. That was the base that actually then explained and dissolved all the stuff above it.

I’m just going to let others write about it and move on to comics – which has been my real bent all the time. Amusing to myself and others.

Sure, I’ll footnote what I’m talking about and there will be the occasional “heavy” blog post here to keep everthing rolling. But most of it will show up in comics as parody of what is happening around us.

And I think that this will keep us all amused as long as this body lasts. Entertaining, Educational, and Enlightening. Should be fun, too.

So, I’m writing this perfectly non-SEO’d post just to give you fair warning. Oh – it won’t be happening for probably a month or so, since I have some work to do on the above to wrap it all up, plus my comic blog to ramp up.

Lots of stuff to do.

Cheers.

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Thanks for visiting my blog and reading this entry.
If you’ve found it valuable, please consider donating via PayPal to enable my continuing research.

Or – buy a book from my “Go Thunk Yourself” bookstore.

Our latest upcoming release, “Freedom Is — (period.)”