Edible Ojai & Ventura 2011 The issue of Meat
http://www.ediblecommunities.com/ojai/winter-2012/winter-2012.htm
http://www.ediblecommunities.com/ojai/winter-2012/how-animals-will-save-the-planet.htm
how animals (will) save the planet
By Joanie Blaxter
photos by Carole Topalian
Industrialized humans have become so disconnected from the act of
producing what we consume, we not only have no practical idea about how
to do it, we have no understanding about who and how many must die so we
may eateven a vegan diet.
Anyone who has gardened or farmed organically knows it inevitably comes
down to the same choice. Manure and mulch can nurture your soil only to a
limited degree. Ultimately either you must supplement with (vegetarian)
artificial fertilizers, in which case you are also forced to use
pesticides because otherwise your (unhealthy) plants will be consumed by
insects or… you must nourish your soil with animal byproducts (blood,
bone, etc). Why? For a simple reason: Such a cycle is what most closely
mimics how enrichment happens in nature.
Realistically, how can one nonviolently feed starving soil? Let predators
do the killing for you and then steal their food to put on the garden?
When the slugs and gophers take all your produce before you can get to
it, does it become OK to kill them? If your organic produce is purchased
in the store, does that mean no animals died to produce it or were spread
on the soil to enrich it? Dying happensall the time, all around us,
invisibly. Dying must happen in order for our life, all life, to be
supported. The most we can claim is we didn’t put an animal (one we could
see) in our mouth and chew.
In 2006 the UN Food and Agriculture Organization released a now
well-publicized report stating that 18% of the world’s manmade greenhouse
gas emissions were attributable to livestock production. Shockingly, that
is more than the total produced by all forms of transportation combined
and has recently led to a call from the UN for a global reduction in meat
consumption. There is one major problem with this data, however. These
figures represent the effects only of large-scale feedlot operations, not
livestock living naturally on grass. Animals living healthy lives on
local, small, diversified farms are not included in these
figures.
Michael Pollan, author of The Omnivore’s Dilemma, clarifies: “Much
of the carbon footprint of beef comes from growing grain to feed animals,
which requires fossil-fuel-based fertilizers, pesticides and
transportation.”
Eliot Coleman, author of The New Organic Grower and host of the TV
series “Gardening Naturally,” hits the carbon emissions ball away
from livestock and squarely back at the petrochemical industry. “The
culprit is not meat eating but rather the excesses of the
corporate/industrial agriculture. The UN report shows either great
ignorance or possibly the influence of the fossil fuel lobby with the
intent of confusing the public.” And he adds, “If I butcher a steer for
my food, and that steer has been raised on grass on my farm, I am not
responsible for any increased CO2…A vegetarian eating tofu made in a
factory from soybeans grown in Brazil is responsible for a lot more CO2
than I am.”
Joel Salatin, farmer/rancher and author of seven books on sustainable
pasture practices and animal husbandry, goes a step further. Since plants
remove carbon from the air and fix it in the earth, he argues that
animals living on pasture improve soil quality with their manure, thereby
actually reducing carbon emissions.
Thomas Harttung operates the world’s largest community supported
agriculture (CSA) program through his Aarstiderne farm in Denmark, where
he grazes 150 head of cattle. “With proper management, pastoralists,
ranchers and farmers could achieve a 2% increase in soil-carbon levels on
existing agricultural, grazing and desert lands over the next two
decades.” This is an astounding claim when some experts estimate that
only a 1% increase in soilcarbon is necessary in order to capture the
total equivalent of all the world’s greenhouse-gas
emissions.
If Harttung’s figures are correct, then proper management of livestock
grazing is a powerful tool for reducing carbon emissions globally.
Furthermore, it means the consumption of locally produced,
pastured meat, dairy and eggs actually improves our environment by fixing
more carbon into the soil than is emitted in the process of producing
these foods.
When humans support animals to do what they’re designed to
doherbivores eating grass, chickens eating bugs, pigs rooting in open
fields, farm animals basically living healthy, protected lives on open
pastureit appears this may very well have a more positive ecological
impact than not just factory farming, but also than eliminating animal
products from the diet.
This perspective comes as no surprise to indigenous peoples. The
native tribes of this country, for example, have always seen killing for
food as a necessary part of their stewardship of Mother Earth. In fact,
there are no reports of any indigenous peoples ever voluntarily eating
only a plant-based diet, only tribes that were forced into starvation
mode.
That the death of one being leads to the birth of another is seen as
sacred beyond words and to be welcomed, not resisted. Martin Prechtel
describes this perspective through the Mayan concept of kas-limaal,
which he translates as “mutual indebtedness, mutual insparkedness” in
his book Long Life, Honey in the Heart. A Mayan elder in Guatemala
explains to him, “The knowledge that every animal, plant, person, wind
and season is indebted to the fruit of everything else is an adult
knowledge. To get out of debt means you don’t want to be part of life,
and you don’t want to grow into an adult.”
In other words, in this culture in particular, we need to revive the
tradition of honoring every blessing we receive with the recognition that
we then become indebted to the giver. You cannot step out of the cycle of
life and death in order to avoid this indebtedness.
To believe that you can is the essence of immaturity. All you can do is
embrace it with humility by honoring your debts.
Someone recently said to me that she had just acquired two chickens as
layers and, through observing them, she feels she could never eat them. I
wonder if her hens are free to roam? Because if so then surely she must
have observed her own chickens eating bugs.
Biologically related to vultures, chickens are carnivorous. They eat
anything that moves. Or anything that doesn’t. If they get the chance to
feed on a kill, any kill, they will. You can always tell if a hen has
been force-fed a strictly vegetarian diet. Her yolks are a pale yellow,
not the robust orange of an egg rich in omegas, and her whites (the
protein) are flat, not full.
And then there’s the matter of the two roosters that were born alongside
those two hens. Chickens breed in a 50/50 ratio. For every hen acquired
for laying, a rooster somewhere has been killed. And what about when her
layers die of old age? If the owner won’t eat them, her remaining
chickens would love it if she gave the old girls to them. The chickens
would be healthier for the feast, as would be their eggs.
To believe that you are able to stand outside killing is to attempt to
“not be indebted,” as the Maya would say, to refuse to grow into an
adult. Beyond asking if what I put in my mouth “has a face,” the deeper
question is “What are the broadest consequences of all my eating
choices?” And for that we must look at the long-term effects on the whole
ecological system and sentient being that is Gaia.
The quick answer isthe 10,000 years that humanity has been raising crops
has wreaked more ecological destruction than the previous 10 million.
Why? Because whenever a plow is put to the ground, the soil is degraded.
Plowing exposes the earth to sun, rain and wind and allows precious
topsoil to wash into the sea. There are, of course, various parts of the
globe where wise farmers have learned to imitate the cycles of nature
rather than work against them. However, not enough. Desertification
directly due to 100 centuries of unsustainable agriculture now blankets
large areas of the globe… and continues to grow. As always, the earth
provides the direction we need. The key lies in looking at how life has
successfully evolved over millennia. That picture has always included
humans, animals and plants in a mutual stewardship of our home which puts
more fertility back into the earth than is removed in the harvest. To
presume to be able to somehow remove one’s self from that natural order
could be described as the height of arrogance or ignorance. But isn’t
that exactly what westernized humans have been (disastrously) attempting
to do for centuries now?
As much as you can, grow your food. There is no more humbling nor
exacting education. It will change you, forever.
Joanie Blaxter is the co-leader of the Ventura chapter of the Weston
A. Price Foundation and member of the Ventura Ag Futures Alliance. After
raising her daughter by herself in a small town in Vermont, she moved to
Ojai where she daily enjoys a year-round growing season and snow-free
driveway. She gratefully acknowledges The Vegetarian Myth by Lierre Keith
and highly recommends reading it as a way to get the inside of your head
scrubbed out and re-arranged. To learn more about thriving through eating
sustainably and the worldwide similarities of the diets of healthy
indigenous peoples please see westonaprice.org. Contact Joanie at
joanieblaxter@ gmail.com.
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