I'm barely on Facebook, because I'm shy....
DBF, however, is not shy. He posted a picture of me plucking one of our first meat birds (because he's so proud and excited about our first meaties), and a family member was disturbed by it. This is no surprise.
EDIT: Picture added to post #37
It has inspired us to open up conversations about where meat comes from, what goes into it, and how it is treated. I know some people will put their fingers in their ears and chant "LALALALA-I-can't-hear-you", and that's OK.
I used to take meat for granted. Seriously, until a few months ago, if you handed me a whole supermarket chicken, I could not have told you which end was the head and which was the tail.
I know y'all have hear this one before, so thanks, kindly for listening to my rant.
DBF has since taken the picture down and posted this:
Thats Disgusting was one of the messages I received about our meat chickens. While this message may be very appropriate for vegetarians, it would be a questionable statement from those who may eat chicken.
I was also asked: Why did we do this
Simple, because we love chickens and we also eat chicken.
So chicken eaters, heres a few questions you may want to ask yourself:
When was the last time you ate chicken?
Where did the chicken come from?
How happy was the chicken during its life?
Was the chicken housed with hundreds or thousands of other chickens?
Was the chicken medicated during its life?
If your chicken was labeled as Free Range do you know what that means or how the chicken actually lived?
How was the chicken dispatched was it relatively humane?
What were the conditions of the processing center?
How long was the chicken stored before its use?
What was the storage process?
How far did the processed chicken have to travel before it reached your plate?
Heres my answers:
Our chickens were purchased as 1 day old chicks from our local feed store (the hatchery is out of New Mexico)
Our chickens lived very happy lives!!
Our chickens were raised organically with the freshest local feed available
Our chickens were allowed to range the yard often, although they were pretty lazy and just sat around a lot
Our chickens received lots of love and care they really liked pets on their chests
Our chickens were processed close to their natural expiration date
Our chickens were dispatched in the most humane way we could find
Our chickens were immediately chilled and stored in a very clean environment
DBF, however, is not shy. He posted a picture of me plucking one of our first meat birds (because he's so proud and excited about our first meaties), and a family member was disturbed by it. This is no surprise.

EDIT: Picture added to post #37
It has inspired us to open up conversations about where meat comes from, what goes into it, and how it is treated. I know some people will put their fingers in their ears and chant "LALALALA-I-can't-hear-you", and that's OK.
I used to take meat for granted. Seriously, until a few months ago, if you handed me a whole supermarket chicken, I could not have told you which end was the head and which was the tail.

I know y'all have hear this one before, so thanks, kindly for listening to my rant.

DBF has since taken the picture down and posted this:
Thats Disgusting was one of the messages I received about our meat chickens. While this message may be very appropriate for vegetarians, it would be a questionable statement from those who may eat chicken.
I was also asked: Why did we do this
Simple, because we love chickens and we also eat chicken.
So chicken eaters, heres a few questions you may want to ask yourself:
When was the last time you ate chicken?
Where did the chicken come from?
How happy was the chicken during its life?
Was the chicken housed with hundreds or thousands of other chickens?
Was the chicken medicated during its life?
If your chicken was labeled as Free Range do you know what that means or how the chicken actually lived?
How was the chicken dispatched was it relatively humane?
What were the conditions of the processing center?
How long was the chicken stored before its use?
What was the storage process?
How far did the processed chicken have to travel before it reached your plate?
Heres my answers:
Our chickens were purchased as 1 day old chicks from our local feed store (the hatchery is out of New Mexico)
Our chickens lived very happy lives!!
Our chickens were raised organically with the freshest local feed available
Our chickens were allowed to range the yard often, although they were pretty lazy and just sat around a lot
Our chickens received lots of love and care they really liked pets on their chests
Our chickens were processed close to their natural expiration date
Our chickens were dispatched in the most humane way we could find
Our chickens were immediately chilled and stored in a very clean environment
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