mardi 2 avril 2013

LAIT: SÉPARATION DU VEAU ET DE LA MERE A LA NAISANCE


 C' EST INADMISSIBLE!!!
LES FERMIERS CONTINUENT DE  TENTER DE SE JUSTIFIER POUR CETTE PRATIQUE
INQUALIFIABLE!!!!
LES MAUVAISES RAISONS DONNÉES PAR LES ELEVEURS, MEME DE PETITES FERMES POUR JUSTIFIER LA SÉPARATION DU VEAU ET DE LE MERE A LA NAISSANCE
 SOURCE ET SUITE
 EXTRAIT:

Dairy farming would have us believe that the unnatural breaking of the bond between a mother cow and her calf is somehow natural because it is better for the health and safety of the animals. Here’s a case in point.
Consider the typical logic in the Wagner Farm post that attempts to justify why mother cow Emma and baby calf Schmidt must be separated at birth.

Wagner Farm: “Schmidt gets a bottle of his mom’s milk once in the morning and again in the evening. Since Emma gets milked only once a day right now, her milk must be saved and reheated just like it is for a baby.”
Me: Her milk would not need to be reheated or treated in any way if her calf was allowed to suckle directly. The risk of transmitting pathogens to the calf comes primarily from manmade milking machinery (which nature did not account for). Can a calf get pathogens from her mother’s milk? Sure. But there are also powerful antibodies in that milk designed by nature to prevent infection, and heating the milk just kills off nature’s natural defenses.

 AUJOUD' HUI,,, ET IL Y A QUELQUES SEMAINES PAR UN AUTRE FERMIER
SOURCE ET SUITE;
 EXTRAIT:


A small Minnesota dairy farm, Orange Patch Dairy, responds to the question from a concerned vegan: Why do you take the calves from their mothers? Following are key passages from Orange Patch Dairy in quotes and my response below each passage.
Farmer: “I had a comment on one of my earlier posts where a concerned vegan had an issue with dairy farmers removing calves from their mothers. I thought about this practice and how misunderstood it actually is.”
The farmer goes on to describe the birthing of a new calf.
Farmer: “Ruthie [a new baby calf] was placed in a freshly bedding stall, where she could be clean and free of pathogens. Just like babies born at a hospital and placed in a nursery.”
The obvious difference here is that the calf will never be returned to her mother, of course, completely unlike what happens to human mothers and their newborns in a nursery setting. The farmer conveniently omitted that little bit of information.



Aucun commentaire: