The Boytim Bunch

The Boytim Bunch

Saturday, June 22, 2013

Tour of an Amish Farm (Caution - pictures of crude Animal Husbandry)

 
 
We took a tour of a small Amish Farm. We really enjoyed the buggy ride out and visiting with the owner of the farm,
 
This was on our ride out



 A beautiful apple orchard
They have gotten a LOT of rain so everything is so green! 

interesting placement for a pillar don't you think?

Our tour guides house ( just so you know, our tour guide said it was fine to take any pictures we wanted. From what I understand - Amish believe it is vain to POSE for pictures but they do not mind you taking pictures of them - as long as they are not posing.)

 and barn and grandson 
 

then we wandered into this little building. It was full of fermenting corn, soy meal and some left overs from making apple cider. This was the cows feed. The man told us that they have so many cows they cannot raise enough feed for them so they have to have stuff trucked in...to the tune of TONS of feed (corn and soy) trucked in. When he was telling me this I was wondering where in the world all these cows were - we certainly did not see any in the fields. I was still pretty naive - I still have the misguided belief that cows get to graze and get some grain as a supplement...
 
this was a dietary analysis of what the cows are fed.

 then we stepped into this room. I was surprised (and I think everyone else was too) at the smell. I wish the camera had smellavision - it smelled chokingly bad. This was the milking room - odd I thought to have a milking room with no cows and no way for cows to get in. The farmer explained that they used to have to milk the cows into pails and them come pump it into this tank. Now they use the hoses you see laying across the top of the tank and just attach it to the cow. "OK" I thought - they bring the cows up to the back door and milk them. Still why all the smell?
If you look to the right of the picture you see a doorway we are about to go through - this was the source of the smell.....
(BTW - this particular farmer provides milk to a very well known butter maker)

 
I literally turned on my camera seconds after the farmer said "Some people believe that these cows would rather be outside eating grass. They really just like it right here inside out of the sun and rain".
These poor cows were literally chained up and NEVER leave the concrete square that is their doom. It was starting to dawn on me that these cows spend their entire lives chained in this box with a small scratching post hanging above them so they can scratch their backs with the little bit of movement their chains allow. They stand here and eat corn and soy (TONS of it) all day and are fed antibiotics because they are so sick. A majority of these cows were laying down in their own feces.
 

this poor cow had some real issues with her udder

the corn and soy feed is put in a feeding trough sort of area cut out of the concrete in front of them and they just sit here and eat it all day



and this is where they poop. This place, this building was so disgusting it turned my stomach, and I have a pretty tough stomach.


these cows laying around in their own feces, eating GMO corn and soy, being fed a continual stream of antibiotics - how can any think that their milk (or any of their milk products)  is in any way nourishing? Call me extreme -but I say the milk is downright dangerous. No wonder they have to severely high heat pasteurize this stuff! With all the poop and mastitis pus that gets in there! I cannot imagine that anyone can say that this is caring for God's creation in any way, shape or form. Just the waste from this place is a tremendous hazard.
Shortly after this we went to look at some calves. The farmer explained to us that in the birthing process the cows can't actually birth their babies but the babies have to be pulled out. WHAT! You are saying that all of a sudden, after thousands of years, mama cows cannot have babies without us humans PULLING them out! And of course mama was not with the baby - she was chained up in her prison on the concrete slab.
I have to ask - if the cows really are better off on that slab - why don't you see that on any of the cartons of milk.. you know, the cow with the diarrhea down her udder on her two foot chain. Why do you always see cows in green pastures under blue skies? We really need to get our heads out of the sand and start looking at the reality here - we are supporting this, we are agreeing to this, we are, by continuing to buy these products, condoning this kind of treatment of God's creations. I don't know about you but honestly, as far as we are concerned... we will do without these products before we will support this kind of treatment and before we will put this kind of merchandise in our bodies.
Sadly the organic standard is not any better - it is the same kind of treatment - the cows are just fed organic grain. Organic cows standing in their own organic poop.
 
The horses were even sad looking - they were in very small cages and spent the entire time laying their ears back and looking mean.

the farmers granddaughter jumping - they have had this trampoline since their kids were little

the farmers son cutting hay - he was also spraying something or other on the fields with this machine. The farmer talked about him having to use a 4 horse team. We saw lots of 4 horse teams. Will explained to me later that used to, they could plow with a 2 horse team but that they have compacted the soil so much with their chemicals and over use that they have to use more horses to plow now. What used to be  2 horse field is a 4 or 6 horse field now.
 
Bella on our trip back
 
 
 
 
 

3 comments:

M Kathy King said...

How Disgusting! I got sick @ my stomach without 'smell-a-vision'... don't think I could take walking through that place. All of it is so sad & such a shame.

Anne Maserang said...

That makes me soooooo sad and disgusted. What a shame for these beautiful creatures from God to be treated like this. I am speechless!!!!

H Potts said...

Certainly never thought the Amish would allow this. Where is common sense. We raised cattle for the beef market and they certainly had grass and fresh air and natural childbirth on our little acreage.