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#1
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I lease out our pasture to a neighbor for his cows.
In past years they have been moved to foothill winter pasture at this time of year. This year he neglected to find such ground until it was all booked and the cows are still here. It has rained a lot and continues to rain and they have mucked up the area around the barn to the point that I can't get into the pasture to work the couple dogs I have ( I still have people willing to fit their training needs into my fishing schedule ) without sinking up to my knees. All this mud sucks, in multiple ways, and reminds me of how destructive cattle really are. As a fisherman in cattle country I'm often made aware of the fact that beef is expensive, in many ways. Included is the damage cows do to stream environments. The local river is now running very muddy. A drive upstream soon locates the major source of the mud, a seasonal stream that comes in after draining thousands of acres of ground with cattle churning it up with ever step. Cutting back on red meat is good for your heart, and your environment. Eat a veggie meal tonight for the fish you love. g -------------------------------------------- This message brought to you by Bored ROFFians for Irrelevant Posting Larry L ( I approved this post ) |
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As a fisherman in cattle country I'm often made aware of the fact that beef
is expensive, in many ways. * Included is the damage cows do to stream environments. * The local river is now running very muddy. * A drive upstream soon locates the major source of the mud, a seasonal stream that comes in after draining thousands of acres of ground with cattle churning it up with ever step. Cutting back on red meat is good for your heart, and your environment. Eat a veggie meal tonight for the fish you love. g Or eat beef from southern or central Nebraska where there are no pretty trout streams to muddy up. Frank Reid |
#3
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![]() "Frank Reid" wrote Or eat beef from southern or central Nebraska where there are no pretty trout streams to muddy up. Frank Reid There you go .... and toss 'em some corn for a while, too IMHO, unless you have experienced mid-west corn fed beef you ain't really experienced beef ... which is one reason I don't have a problem cutting back, ya can't get the real thing in Arnoldland ( unless you have Arnold's budget ) |
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Or eat beef from southern or central Nebraska where there are no
pretty trout streams to muddy up. Frank Reid There you go .... and toss 'em some corn for a while, too IMHO, unless you have experienced mid-west corn fed beef you ain't really experienced beef ... which is one reason I don't have a problem cutting back, ya can't get the real thing in Arnoldland ( unless you have Arnold's budget ) Well, the fruitcakes that say the only way to make ethanol is to use corn are driving up the price of that cornfed beef. Feed corn is going for record prices right now, pushing the feedlots out of the market. Yah know, good old Fidel was right when he criticized the US way of making ethanol, saying it would impact the feeding of the people. I'm very big on cellusosic ethanol and thermal depolymerization. Leave corn and soybeans for the cattle. Frank Reid |
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Larry L wrote:
... As a fisherman in cattle country I'm often made aware of the fact that beef is expensive, in many ways. Included is the damage cows do to stream environments. The local river is now running very muddy. A drive upstream soon locates the major source of the mud, a seasonal stream that comes in after draining thousands of acres of ground with cattle churning it up with ever step. ... Dairy farmers in southern Wisconsin/Minnesota have made great strides, with the help of TU and forward thinking folks at the respective DNRs, in keeping the cattle out of the streams. In the 20 or so years I've been fishing those streams I've seen enormous improvements. I don't know what your water situation is there in California but in the cattle country of Wyoming/Montana more damage is done to trout streams by diverting water to grow grass than by the actual cattle. If the cattle farmers had their way all the water would be in irrigation ditches watering fields of cow food instead of in the trout streams. -- Ken Fortenberry |
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![]() "Ken Fortenberry" wrote Dairy farmers in southern Wisconsin/Minnesota have made great strides, with the help of TU and forward thinking folks at the respective DNRs, Thanks for mentioning that, Ken Actually, when I re-read my post I feared that it would be taken as anti-cattleMAN by some ... and it isn't I think the last 20 years has seen great strides nearly everywhere by ranchers and farmers to mitigate their occupation's negative impacts on environment. Even in the water-poor West we see more and more Ag land users volunteering to change water uses for better efficiency, for instance. ( Not to mention ranchers setting aside easements for permanent fisherman access such as has occurred on the Madison. Ranchers can be our best friends, too http://tinyurl.com/343bak ) One thing 'environmentalists' need to understand is that whole industries are not (often) the enemy, rather the uninformed, uncaring, practitioners of nearly all industries are. We are ALL on this planet together, ALL like to eat, ALL want to drive our cars. We need to, and increasing are, ALL work together, realizing compromize is part of the deal ... for ALL |
#7
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On Jan 23, 2:41 pm, Steve wrote:
Pumping antibiotics into cattle standing knee deep in feces and urine which carry those antibiotics into both the food and water table doesn't seem like a great stride forward. I'm no veggie, but I eat a lot less meat than I used to. I'm too lazy to hunt anymore, so I buy locally grown grassfed beef instead. It costs twice as much, but it sure is good. However, as someone else already pointed out--all that grass sucks the water out of the rivers, at an alarming rate. I think the root problem is too damn many people. The planet was better off 50 years ago, where the primary difference is fewer humans then and so many more now. Humans have become a destructive pestilence on the face of the earth. |
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#9
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On Jan 25, 3:18 pm, Jim Edmondson wrote:
there is a solution to that "problem" - you can kill or castrate yourself Tied tubes is less drastic :-) |
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On Sat, 26 Jan 2008 09:38:57 -0800, while-one wrote:
On Jan 25, 3:18 pm, Jim Edmondson wrote: there is a solution to that "problem" - you can kill or castrate yourself Tied tubes is less drastic :-) I like this little Ubuntu/pan newsreader. ......a by-product of the pestilence? |
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