I heard on Radio Four this morning that a study by Newcastle University has shown that farmers who have individual names for their cows get a higher milk yield. Does this translate to chickens (and how many names would you need for a flock of 4,000?)
The theory is that someone who gives an animal a name is treating it as an individual, not a machine, so will take better care, notice problems more quickly etc. Of course, that's an example of the Blindingly Obvious - a line of research well known for costing thousands of pounds to find out what any animal keeper could tell you straight away.
I reckon that this is the reason that farmers eliminate 'spent hens' yet we manage to get good yeilds from them for some time afterwards. What do you reckon? Anyone NOT got names for his/her girls?
The theory is that someone who gives an animal a name is treating it as an individual, not a machine, so will take better care, notice problems more quickly etc. Of course, that's an example of the Blindingly Obvious - a line of research well known for costing thousands of pounds to find out what any animal keeper could tell you straight away.
I reckon that this is the reason that farmers eliminate 'spent hens' yet we manage to get good yeilds from them for some time afterwards. What do you reckon? Anyone NOT got names for his/her girls?
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