DlB—Lancaster Farming, Saturday, January 24,1981 Farming is a difficult business made even more difficult by the growing list of do’s and don’ts handed to farmers by a lot of govern mental agencies Don’t pollute the air, don’t pollute the water, don’t pollute the soil, don’t make noise; don’t make dust; and don’t smell up the neigh borhood with your pig farms and chicken houses. And when you’re through filling out all of the forms required by a dozen different agen cies, you may have a little tune left for farming. Farmers are berated by environmentalists, con servationists, and those who want them to feed a hungry world They’re lambasted by consumers because of high food prices and from health nuts because of the chemicals they must use to produce cheap food. And now, another problem. There seems to be a growing concern over what some folks are calling ‘ animal rights ” In fact, some Washington observers are saying that animal rights may be the next big JQJjggT FORAGE BOX FEATURES • Standard Equipment includes 6 ft. hinge rear door, rear unloading, 18” diagonal cross auger and individual beater clutch. BIG CAPACITY...RUGGED CONSTRUCTION... BUILT FOR PERFORMANCE 7x16x6 feet - 670 cu. ft. Dion self unloading forage boxes and bunk feeders are especially tough, strong and efficient,, fit for today’s farming needs. The ruggedly constructed wood box withstands rough field useage far better than all-steel boxes. Other Features • Smooth variable speed unloading 16 ft. 3 beater w/roof 12 ton electric wheel gear w/12.5Lx15 8 ply tires. Also available with Dion Tandem Gears. 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Farm Talk Jerry Webb agricultural issue Animal welfare advocates are objecting to the way modern agriculture takes care of its animals, suggesting that confinement and overcrowding are causing abnormal behavior, distress and physical disorders And they’re condemning farmers and agricultural researchers for such "inhumane prac tices” as routine drug use, feeding livestock on concrete slatted floors, using souped-up rations for beef cattle, even castration of male animals How far some of this will go remains to be seen, but the Institute for the Study of Animal Protection insists farm animals have some basic rights. Those rights include the right to stand up com fortably, he down, turn around, stretch, and groom or preen Michael Fox, the director of that organization, says factory farming needs to readdress itself in terms of animal welfare He says he thinks farmers and researchers have gone too tar with confinement and that practices. oroductivity should not be the sole criterion tor animal welfare He says there is already sufficient evidence to show that farm animals well being is not generally con sidered when efficiency of production is the only measure He insists his organization does not want to go back to the old days of farm animals roaming green pastures and living to ripe old ages But he and some other animal welfansts Uo reel farm animals confinement has gone too far. Well maybe it has, but consumers are going to have to make a judgment about how comfortable and well cared for they want their food animals to be, and at what price. Because today’s food prices reflect efficiency of production, and con finement feeding means more animals per farm and per farm worker, greater efficiency per pound of feed consumed and much shorter feeding periods And all of that is reflected in the price of our meat at the super market The old ways of a backyard poultry flock, a sow and her pigs out behind the barn, and a couple of steers roaming the pasture just won’t make it m today’s society. There was a time many generations ago when Americans ate beef animals that were three or four years old. It was common practice for a beef animal to weigh 2000 pounds when it went to market and to be so tough you had to boil it before it SPECIAL PRICE THRU JANUARY - CALL US! Limited Supply, Boxes In Stock Only INC. could be eaten Ihere was also a time when the only chickens that people ate were stewed because they were too old and tough to eat any other way Yes, Americans are going to have to decide whether they want happy, contented animals frolicking in green pastures and enjoying the good agricultural life, or whether we will continue to confine food animals into minimal spaces for maximum efficiency A chicken in a cage may not be as happy as one roaming the barnyard searching for worms. On the other hand, it might be more happy, considering that its food supply and plenty of fresh water is right at hand CONCRETE SPRAYING SERVICE REPAIRS OF: CONSTRUCTION OF: Silos, Retaining Wails, Manure Pits, Manure Pits, Existing Swimming Pools, Masonary Walls. Etc. For Information Call: KEYSTONE GUN-KRETE 644 Beaver Valley Pike Call Mahion Stoitzfus 717-768-3641 Lancaster, PA 17602 or Herb Groff - 717-464-2147 and it doesn I have to fight with other animals and woiry about being run ovei by a tractor. And, when you thuik about it, who’s to say what is happiness to a chicken > Agricultural researchers maintain that confinement methods actually provide better health control and more frequent observation, more timely disease treatment, and a lower mortality rate, So, crowded conditions aren’t the only measure of animal welfare. How far the animal rights battle is going to go may depead on who is pushing the cause and what kind of reception it gets. 1 think most people agree that animals have the right lo humane treatment, but that doesn’t mean they deserve the same rights and privileges as people. After all, we’re talking about food ammais-that after whatever period of feeding are going to be slaughtered and eaten by people-and that may be the ultimate act of inhumanity