now Martin is stirring it with that arguement!! - particularly as I understand he used to be a vegetarian..MrFalafel wrote:Me too! I live in a wonderfully rural area where lambs are being farmed and mussels are being raised. But to me, its such a waste that these acres of farmland are being used to raise such a small amount of animal based foods when they could be used to raise pulses and veggies that we can all enjoy with far less impact on the environment. And I personally get a pang in my chest knowing that the playful lamb jumping around the field only has weeks to live before being killed for someones dinner.Martin wrote:I have the great good fortune to live in the midst of the country - this afternoon, I walked the dogs through the local fields, teeming with sheep with lambs at foot, young bullocks, pheasants, rabbits.......all was well with the world........what a sad, bleak place the countryside would be if the veggies/ vegans got their way![]()
Without us meat-eaters, so many animals just wouldn't have a life at all......
it should be a GOOD life for the animals involved - thankfully, welfare standards ARE improving, long may it continue!![]()
I'm also within sight of the South Downs - living proof that there is farmland that is just not suited to arable use, but ideally suited for meat production. Back in "euro grain mountain" days, several greedy farmers tried ploughing up the downland to cop the hefty subsidies - as soon as it rained, the scanty topsoil all washed away..............![]()
Leather shoes thanks!
But we all have different ideas on this and I respect meat eaters and the rest. I'm just trying to help dispell some myths?
but it is true there are great areas of the country which are NOT suitable for growing pulses or veggies, but are suitable for animals. Dartmoor, for instance.
Lambs are not killed at only weeks old, but in fact are sheep when they are bumped off, at about 6 months old.. generally. so indeed a short life, but not as short as a few weeks.