Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label farming. Show all posts

Sunday, 26 January 2014

Importance Of Teaching Kids About Agriculture

Teaching agriculture and good farming practices to school kids instils knowledge on how plants grow, live and die. There are many lessons kids learn from agriculture and gardening including knowledge on how food gets to the table, how clothes get onto store shelves and how seeds germinate. Teaching kids about farming helps them get perspective of their lives and the world around them.

Basic Science

Teaching agriculture to school kids introduces them to basic scientific knowledge and how to apply the lessons in their daily lives. For example, through the lessons kids learn about how bees make honey, how fruits develop, how trees grow and how oil is obtained from corn. Agriculture combines the concepts of chemistry, physics and biology and puts them into everyday application.

School Gardens

School gardens help kids learn important lessons about farming and the environment. Planting different crop varieties allows kids to learn how things grow, live and die. Gardens help young people develop social skills by working in groups. In addition, it helps them put their agricultural knowledge into practical dimensions.

Nutrition

Agriculture lessons educate kids about nutrition, where foods come from, what kinds of foods are beneficial and the importance of eating the right kinds of foods.
Leadership and Team Building
Farming lessons help kids develop skills in communication, leadership, team building and civic engagement among others. Through agriculture lessons, kids learn about the importance of farming to the community and how to work together for the common good. They also learn about how communities provide food to their members.

History Of Farming

Civilisation came about when people figured out ways to domesticate plants and animals in their surroundings. This made people adopt the farming lifestyle. Farming created a shift from hunting and gathering to settling in one place. The first towns and cities developed around areas that had consistent food supplies. With time, farmers began to perfect their farming practices. The agricultural revolution made many people realise they can get more food on less land. Modern farming innovations such as use of synthetic nitrogen, pesticides, machines and rock phosphates have led to some of the largest crop yields in history.

Features

Today, subsistence farmers are at the bottom of the farming food chain. These farmers use small portions of land to produce small amounts of foods enough for their families. Intensive farmers have huge tracts of land and use the latest farming techniques to produce food. They can produce foods for large populations. Most large scale farms use technologies that produce high yields.

Types

Most of the foods we eat including wheat, corn, rice, milk, fruits and grains are obtained from farming. Many farms deal with the production of non-food substances such as cotton, hemp and flax among others. The increased need for cleaner energy has made many countries to invest in biofuel farms to produce ethanol, methane, biomass and biodiesel.

Potential

There is growing competition among industrial farms. The never-ending demand for food has led to a new kind of agricultural revolution. Today's farmers use agricultural chemistry and advanced mechanisations in farming. Some of the new techniques used in farming include use of chemical fertilisers, insecticides, hydroponics, gene manipulation, plant breeding and hybridisation.
Warning Industrial farming comes at a cost. Large-scale farming and poor agricultural practices have detrimental effects on the environment including deforestation, soil erosion and air pollution. Pesticides pollute water bodies where people get their drinking water. Although many countries have set strict regulations to minimise the harmful effects of industrial farming, the regulations are often hard to monitor and enforce.
Farming is a worldwide Practice. Modern farming techniques allow farmers to produce massive quantities of food to feed billions of people. It is important to teach kids about farming and its significance in our lives.
John Dickson is a farmer who works for upuindustries.com. When he’s not on the farm he contributes to agricultural blogs.

Wednesday, 15 February 2012

Choosing the Right Meat: Why Green Meat is Your Best Choice

So you're a meat-eater. Most of us are (sorry all you vegetarians out there - this article is geared toward us carnivores, but you herbivores may benefit from it a bit, as well...just read). Do you know where your meat is coming from? Do you know how it got from the farm to your plate? Do you even know what's in it?
These are all questions that most shoppers don't tend to ask when they go to the grocery store for meat, and certainly don't think about as they're eating it. Here's the shocking truth about where the current meat you're eating likely comes from and some advice on how to make a healthy, humane, permanent change.

Your Typical Meat

Whether you're buying chicken, beef or pork, you're going to want to know the truth about where most of that grocery store meat comes from. On many farms that are in business for the sole purpose of breeding animals for slaughter, the animals are kept in cages that are jam packed together and very overly crowded. The animals have little to no room to move about and are subjected to a life of confinement. This tactic is known as factory farming.

The animals in factory farms live their lives under the most miserable conditions until they are finally sent off to slaughter. Farmers use a number of tactics to further confine their factory animals. Debeaking is a process used on birds that removes their beaks without anesthesia, a very painful procedure for a bird to endure. Many birds stop eating from the pain after debeaking and die of starvation.

Tail docking is a tactic used on pigs that clips their tails short so they don't nip at each others tails. Again, the procedure is performed without anesthesia and is very painful to the pig. Battery cages are used for egg-laying hens and are extremely tight quarters for a number of hens so they can't ever spread their wings. With limited human contact, birds that fall out of cages or get stuck in between stacked cages often die from lack of food and water.

A female pig that is raised for breeding will often be kept in a gestation crate that is so small that she spends her entire life without ever having the room to stretch out her limbs or even stand up. She gives birth to many litters from the gestation crate before being sent to slaughter.
Other crates are used for baby cows. Male babies that are born for the purpose of becoming dairy cows, after they are born, are often subjected to a veal crate, where they are fed synthetic formulas and never allowed to be around their mother or drink their mother's milk.

When the animals on factory farms are finally put out of their misery and slaughtered, it is done so in a careless and painful way. This is just scratching the surface of the inhumane practices used by factory farmers, and the meat that they produce is the most commonly found meat on the market in grocery stores. On top of all of these practices, animals are usually pumped up with hormones to make their meat bigger and thicker and given antibiotics to fight the naturally living diseases that filter through their packed quarters.

This is the meat that you consume on a daily basis. Not only are these inhumane practices, but they're bad for the environment and they're bad for your health. Vow to make a change now, and switch to eating less, more healthy meat in the future. Here's how.

Humane Meat

While the term "humane meat" is considered an oxymoron to some, there really exist practices for slaughter that are more humane in terms of how the animals are treated and how they are slaughtered. And with the public becoming more aware of factory farms (hopefully you are now, too, after reading the first half of this article), humane meat is growing in popularity.
Here's what to look for if you want to buy humane meat, which is healthier for you and better for the environment:
  • Free Range: The term free range can actually apply to both meat and dairy products, and it means that the animals are allowed to roam freely on the farm instead of being contained. Free range products often get confused with pasture products, but free range means no fences at all, whereas pastures involve the use of fences but still give animals plenty of space to roam around. While free range farming isn't used for cattle quite as much anymore, it's a very popular method for raising poultry.
  • Grass Fed: This term speaks for itself. Instead of being fed synthetic products and hormone-enriched foods, animals are allowed to eat their natural diets of grass. It generally refers to beef products, but it means the cow itself eats a natural diet and therefore there are no additional ingredients in the meat you purchase at the store or butcher. The USDA defines that a grass fed diet must consist of at least 95% natural grass.
  • Certified Organic: This meat falls under a strictly regulated category by the USDA and is arguably the healthiest option. First, a farmer must keep track of the animal's breed, family history, veterinary care and feed and the animal must be raised on a certified organic pasture. The animals must have unrestricted outdoor access, they never receive antibiotics or hormones and they are fed only a diet of certified organic grasses and grains.
  • Certified Humane: The certified humane label insures that any meat, egg or dairy product stamped with the label has come from animals that were treated humanely. It insures that the animals had access to natural food and water, their health was in no way endangered by their environment and they had sufficient room to move around naturally and freely.
If you're totally against the practices of factory farms, you could even stand your ground by eating less meat in general. Switching to more humane meat is obviously the easiest option, but it wouldn't kill people to skip meat for a day each week.
These more humane types of meat, though, can often be difficult to find in the grocery store. If you can't find it, ask your grocer. The more people that ask for it, the more it will become available.
Also consider buying local meat at a farmer's market or local butcher shop. The chances are very high that local farmers treat their animals humanely, and by purchasing meat locally, you're supporting your local market and agriculture and it will give you a chance to speak directly to the butcher or farmer that your meat is coming from. Ask as many questions as you feel you need answered - it's their job to know about their meat, and you'll only benefit from asking.

Humane Slaughter

On top of being raised properly, humane meat is also slaughtered differently than it is on a factory farm. While factory farm animals are often slaughtered in painful manners that cause the animal suffering, humane practices are those that care more about the animal welfare and understand the scientific fact that animals can feel fear and pain.
Humane slaughtering practices require the animal to be deemed unconscious before the actual slaughtering. This is usually done with either one quick gunshot, an electrical shock or with carbon dioxide. The unconsciousness comes on so quickly that the animal never feels it. Once the animal is deemed unconscious (blood is no longer flowing to the brain), it is then sent for slaughter, so it can't feel a thing.
So the next time you're in the grocery store to buy meat, first reconsider where you're buying from and head to a local butcher or farmer's market or talk to your grocer, or carefully check the labels on the packaging. Look for the terms discussed above to know that your meat was raised humanely, slaughtered humanely, and contains no hormones or antibiotics that you will then be consuming. It's the morally correct choice in meat and your health will benefit in the long run.