ChatterBank1 min ago
Countryfile On Now
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I love this programme seeing new lambs born and nature at its best , this is something the BBC excel in
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No best answer has yet been selected by Bobbisox1. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.// I feel sorry for the lambs when they are taken away for slaughter and the Mums run after them bleating//
What a load of utter rubbish.
Lambs are weaned from their mothers at around 5 -6months old and at this time are often actually bigger than their mothers, who have frankly just about had enough by this time. They are weaned from their mothers and then either sold as 'stores' by the farmer or fattened on either grass or a mixture of grass and 'nuts' (not nuts its a compound feed). They then go to market to be purchased by buyers who buy directly for butchers and the bigger supermarkets.
The utter ignorance of how meat is produced is breathtaking.
What a load of utter rubbish.
Lambs are weaned from their mothers at around 5 -6months old and at this time are often actually bigger than their mothers, who have frankly just about had enough by this time. They are weaned from their mothers and then either sold as 'stores' by the farmer or fattened on either grass or a mixture of grass and 'nuts' (not nuts its a compound feed). They then go to market to be purchased by buyers who buy directly for butchers and the bigger supermarkets.
The utter ignorance of how meat is produced is breathtaking.
Bobbi I totally respect peoples views on meat production, but they should be based on fact, not things they read on FB pages. One picture I saw on FB was a farmer taking a new-born lamb inside a barn, with its mother following, as we do, to take care of the ewe, make sure the afterbirth comes away and give the ewe a feed. The caption read' cruel farmer pulls lamb away from ewe to take to slaughter. Totally ridiculous but people believe it.
Bobbi -that was the Disney version......If a ewe loses its lamb, and another ewe has maybe triplets, or not enough milk, you have to skin the dead lamb and put the skin on the new lamb that is to be 'adopted'. I doubt they would show that on TV but its common practice as sheep are notorious for not wanting other ewes lambs.
https:/ /editor ial01.s hutters tock.co m/wm-pr eview-1 500/327 3723a/2 e6fd621 /nature -shutte rstock- editori al-3273 723a.jp g
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Sorry, I don't want to eat animals that have been bred and raised for slaughter. I don't believe that these animals are stupid enough not to object to being taken from their mothers and killed. An adult cow does not enjoy or even feel comfortable about being stunned, and a young animal does not enjoy or feel comfortable about being taken away from its mother. I choose not to eat animals, and I wish that others would feel the same. I don't think that "Oh I can't do without my meat" is justification for what happens.
Instead if criticising those who choose to eat meat...and the practices you don't like, campaign for better, more ethical and sustainable farming. The majority of the population will continue to eat meat...so make sure that meat is grown and slaughtered humanely. That would be a far more useful way to make change.
Pasta I totally agree. I have been a member of Compassion in World Farming for years and years.
https:/ /www.ci wf.org. uk/abou t-us/
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