Hi Alison My apologies yours was also a valid point,I failed to recognize it in my post above due to cross over posting
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Originally posted by bearded bloke View PostHi Alison My apologies yours was also a valid point,I failed to recognize it in my post above due to cross over posting
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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This question was posed by a friend in my local last weekend as a humorous quip when my daughter brought some of our eggs in for him. Once everyone had finished groaning at his pun, the conversation actually turned to a debate on the ethics of battery farming versus free range and went on for quite some time drawing in more opinions from people with and without experience of keeping chickens.
Some of the issues brought up included questions as to the truth behind supermarket 'free range' products (ie the amount of extra space allotted per chicken to qualify it as free range); the difference between battery eggs and those from home reared hens; do the costs of keeping your own hens for eggs outweigh the cost of buying mass produced eggs; How many eggs can a hen lay over it's natural life span (many non chicken keepers were surprised to learn that hens are born with the makings of every egg they will ever lay already in their ovaries....much like human females in fact) and many more questions and opinions.
My posting of the original quip on here seems to have evoked some similarly excellent debate notably from Scarlett and Bill(whom I know from his previous posts has a vast knowledge of large scale chicken farming), so I feel justified in posting it on a chicken related forum rather than a general chit chat page...although some may disagree.
Hope I haven't ruffled too many feathers (pun intended) with this thread.
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Shouldn't that be 'poultry' jokes?
My opinion on battery farming is that it is necessary since not everyone is as fortunate as ourselves in having the space and time to rear our own. I do feel that maybe the industry should tighten up their codes of ethics though to clamp down on any of the cowboy outfits which the media seem to seize upon thus painting every related business in the same bad light.
Personally I wouldn't buy another supermarket egg for my home consumption ever again, however as a Chef I unfortunately don't have the luxury of that choice in my workplace due to budgets and demand..... again, another debateable point which is raised, ie should I be compromising my principles on this?
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Unfortunately principles come at a price & they don't pay the bills.sigpic“Gorillas are very intelligent, but they don't have to be as delicate as chimps -- they can just smash open the termite nest,”
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Originally posted by Bigmallly View PostUnfortunately principles come at a price & they don't pay the bills.
Some of us live in the past, always talking about back then. Some of us live in the future, always planning what we are going to do. And, then there are those, who neither look behind or ahead, but just enjoy the moment of right now.
Which one are you and is it how you want to be?
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Originally posted by Floyd View PostHow many eggs can a hen lay over it's natural life span (many non chicken keepers were surprised to learn that hens are born with the makings of every egg they will ever lay already in their ovaries....much like human females in fact)...
So if a hen has 1000 ova, at 300 a year in less than 4 years her eggs are exhausted, while the do-as-you-please hen at 100 p.a. has potential to keep going for 10 years.
Which raises another question - when the ova are exhausted, do physiological changes hasten the end of the bird's life?Location - Leicestershire - Chisit-land
Endless wonder.
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Originally posted by Bigmallly View PostUnfortunately principles come at a price & they don't pay the bills.
We found the meat from a bird reared at home went twice as far as shop bought meat. It's not tough, though definitely harder to eat, it goes further, it's full of flavour and not so full of water than you need such huge portions. The whole bird is used too, bones for stock or soup etc. I'm amazed at what people put in the bin thinking there's nothing left....Last edited by Scarlet; 02-08-2014, 12:16 AM.
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I don't have the luxury of my own birds but I do try and buy free range eggs wherever I can. I have seen some horrendous programmes on battery farming with both chickens and pigs, not nice viewing and I imagine that's what puts a lot of people off the idea of battery. It is difficult as I understand that some people don't have the option of not buying either any eggs or as many free range eggs to keep costs down but then when you think about all the products you may buy that contain egg, they will certainly be battery so it kind of defeats the objective of buying free range eggs. Everyone's point is valid and I can see where they're coming from, but such is life and not everyone will agree with each other. As long as we remember to respect everyone's opinions and the person behind them all is fine.Remember it's just a bad day, not a bad life 😁
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