ChatterBank18 mins ago
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by brionon. 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.What kind of farm was it? Llamas? Guinea Pigs? Hardly typical farm animals are they?
As Ethel has already said, most farmers take good care of their animals, they have to- they are their livelihood afterall.
As for this particular "farmer"- words can't express how I feel about his dispicable behaviour.
As Ethel has already said, most farmers take good care of their animals, they have to- they are their livelihood afterall.
As for this particular "farmer"- words can't express how I feel about his dispicable behaviour.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/7637925.stm
Another bad farmer, but most farmers care for their animals.
Another bad farmer, but most farmers care for their animals.
Farmers don't see animals in the same way as standard householders.
For a farmer, his animals are an investment, and a way to realise a profit, so his interest is concerned with keeping them healthy and raising them for which ever product her dervies from them. Sentimentality is never an issue.
Householoders on the other hand have pets. They develop a relationship with their pet, and invest time and emotion in that relationship.
This is the gulf between 'city' and 'country' people. City people find the notion of hunting animals barbaric, country people, with their emotionless interaction with animals around them have no problem in hunting them for sport.
So the short answer is - farmers do not 'love' their animals, but this is obviously not a commercial farming scenario, more lke a small-holding where leglect is endemic.
For a farmer, his animals are an investment, and a way to realise a profit, so his interest is concerned with keeping them healthy and raising them for which ever product her dervies from them. Sentimentality is never an issue.
Householoders on the other hand have pets. They develop a relationship with their pet, and invest time and emotion in that relationship.
This is the gulf between 'city' and 'country' people. City people find the notion of hunting animals barbaric, country people, with their emotionless interaction with animals around them have no problem in hunting them for sport.
So the short answer is - farmers do not 'love' their animals, but this is obviously not a commercial farming scenario, more lke a small-holding where leglect is endemic.
Andy, your views are very simplistic. Us country folk are just as divided in our views as those in towns. I can assure you that a great deal of us countryfolk (and I couldn't live more rurally and am surrounded by farmland) are violently opposed to hunting for sport. I can also assure you that a lot of farmers do 'love' their animals and can become sentimental, but have come to terms with the fact that they have to go to slaughter because that is the nature of their business.