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Going a little off-topic here...
I have to put in a defense for the folks on Dirty Jobs with the turkeys. I know those guys personally and they run a very nice operation. Do you really think those turkeys would be better off to roam outside in a MN winter? No Way! Even if given the opportunity they would stay in their nice warm barns. That was filmed during the coldest part of a very long and nasty winter. Of course the birds are going to look ugly (besides they're turkeys, not exactly my pick for cutest bird!)
Turkey farms in MN used to pasture turkeys in the summer, imagine hundres of acres of continuous grass with turkeys all over, quite a site. They've since moved to the confinement barn because of the decreased hardiness of the broad-breasted turkey strain, not to mention loss to predators.
As long as Americans demand cheap food (and yes folks, it is still cheap compared to other corners of the globe), and fewer people are willing to do the work of providing it, we will have to learn to tolerate the practices that have become common in large scale agriculture. Until everyone moves back to the family farm, growing food for their own family and local community the only way we'll be able to provide is through large-scale agriculture.
Oakdale Farms (the one on the TV show) is a family run operation. They hire a few local individuals as full-time help. They only raise breeding turkeys and sell hatching eggs on a large scale. The hens have plenty of room to roam as they please in the barns- on the show they were crowded in for insemination. The site is located in a beautiful setting nestled into the hills along side a lake. It typically does not smell as most turkey farms do, the owners live right in the middle of it all with barns on both sides of them. They are very conscientious to their neighbors, never wanting to offend.
On another note, I'm liking the prices on broilers from this hatchery, I think I might give them a try.