October, 2009

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Some light reading…

Saturday, October 31st, 2009

I’ve decided I’m going to jump in on the tradition of doing a weekly “roundup” of interesting links. I’ll try to do mine on Friday evening (sorry, this time it’s Saturday), to give everyone a bunch of reading material for the weekend. If you’d like it on a different day, let me know.

Vancouver Courier: Groups call for a boycott of Petcetera

Vancouver Courier: Meatless on Monday

Better LCDs Trump an Animal’s Right to Live and Be Left Alone?

Food miles: meaningful enviro-activism or wacky nonsense? Wacky nonsense.

The Vegan Theory of Relativity

Ag Industry Calls for Prosecutions of Undercover Animal Activists

The methane makers

The Tiniest Rescues and the Building of Compassion

HSUS Investigation Uncovers Veal Calf Abuse, Closes Plant

Cooperatives Working Together to Kill Cows

There have been a whole bunch of articles by and about Jonathan Safran Foer, mostly around the publication of his new book, Eating Animals.

Eating animals is making us sick

Jonathan Safran Foer’s Controversial New Book, Eating Animals

Jonathan Safran Foer’s Eating Animals Turned Me Vegan

Eating Animals: Jonathan Safran Foer’s New Book Asks Why Don’t We Eat Pets?

Eating Animals: Why Eating Matters

The Moral Ferocity of Eating Animals

Keep an eye on the Huffington Post. They’re going to be doing a series of responses to JSF’s book. They all seem worth reading so far.

VeganMofo #13: Stock Market

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

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Good soup at the Granville Island Market

Good soup at the Granville Island Market

Love soup?  Me too!  Problem with loving soup is that it is so hard to find vegan soup anywhere.  I was plesantly surprised when I discovered Stock Market at Granville Island.

There’s usually 3 soups every day.  A meat soup, a seafood soup and a vegetarian soup.  The vegetarian soup may not always be vegan but I would say 4 out of 5 times, it is!  The best thing is that they allow you to bring your own container so you don’t even have to use the styrofoam bowl.

VeganMofo#12: BBT Cafe

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

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BBT Cafe

BBT Cafe

BBT is a cute little Taiwanese cafe/restaurant hidden in the quiet neighborhood of Kerrisdale.  I frequent the cafe (especially in the summer) for their refreshing bubble tea with lemon grass jelly (see VeganMofo #6).   For years, this was all I would go to the cafe for since the menu contained only one very boring vegetarian dish.

However, since this spring, BBT cafe expanded their menu to include a full page of vegetarian selections!  The dishes are mainly veg versions of traditional Taiwanese noodle and rice dishes.   I’ve eaten my way through most of the veg menu and I’m very impressed!

Veg curry meal

Veg curry meal

When ordering the “meals” (these are the dishes with rice and side dishes) make sure you specify that you don’t eat eggs and do not want any eggs in the side dish (there’s usually usually no eggs in the main dish).

Another thing you want to watch out for is that they will always bring you your beverage in a disposable plastic cup if you don’t ask for a glass.  I’ve made that mistake a couple of times.

One of the things I really like about this restaurant is that the waiters always print out a meal ticket and allow you to verify the order before sending it to the kitchen.

Stir fried "chicken" meal with fresh basil

stir fried 'chicken' with fresh basil

VeganMofo#11: Pigless ribs

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

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This is a super easy recipe I found in the most recent issue of Veg News.  If you love BBQ sauce, you’ll love it.  I’m not a huge fan of BBQ sauce.

I won’t list the recipe here.  If you want it, you’ll have to go get your own issue of VegNews Magazine!

Mine turned out just okay….the idea of it was better than the actual thing.

Recipe from Veg News

Recipe from Veg News

VeganMofo #10: Kabocha squash

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

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I love squash but rarely eat it because it just seems like so much work to make.  However, I  recently discovered the ease of making kabocha squash in soup!  All you have to do is cut the squash in half, get rid of the seeds chop it up in big pieces and throw it into a broth.  The skin is totally delish, so you don’t even need to peel it! Add some tofu, veggies and mushroom to the broth and let it cook.

Boil up some noodles in a seperate pot.  When your noodles are cooked, the kabocha soup should also be ready.  It really doesn’t take that long to cook at all!

Combine the soup with the noodles and serve it up in a big giant bowl.  You are now ready to curl up and watch as the rain falls outside.

kombucha squash melts in your mouth like marshmellow

kabocha squash melts in your mouth like marshmellow

VeganMofo #9: Olives, olives and olives

Thursday, October 29th, 2009

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It’s almost the end of the month and I’m about 10 posts behind.  Let’s see if I can catch up.

Has anyone been to the olive bar at the new Whole Foods on Cambie Street?  It’s hidden way in the back where they keep all the rancid cow puss (aka cheese).  Guess that’s why I never discovered it until now.

Check it out….

Olives at whole foods market

Olives at whole foods market

They have black olives, green olives, oil cured olives, stuffed olives, spiced olives, teeny olives, gigantic olives.   Although I was a little disappointed that they don’t have the fig stuffed olives that Capers used to have.  Those were my favorite.

Beside olives, this bar has pickled mushrooms, peppers and garlic.

If you like olives as much as me, you’ve gotta check this out.

A bit of a meta-post on the Worldwatch report

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

Eric Marcus wrote on his blog yesterday about the recent WorldWatch article which concluded that animal agriculture is responsible for a whopping 51% of global greenhouse gas emissions. Marcus quotes from Dave Steele, who has written an analysis of the report.

To sum up, Dave found that the actual number, based on the information from WorldWatch, is more like 30%, which is a lot less, but is still a whole lot. There is a link to Dave’s analysis at the end of Eric Marcus’s post.

I wanted to mention this here because the numbers are important and it’s good to always have the latest information at hand, and because Dave is a good friend and a good guy. He’s also a scientist, so he knows what he’s talking about. Dave helped us out with our environment leaflet.

In slightly related news, an article appeared in The Times this morning: “Climate chief Lord Stern: give up meat to save the planet“.

People will need to turn vegetarian if the world is to conquer climate change, according to a leading authority on global warming.

In an interview with The Times, Lord Stern of Brentford said: “Meat is a wasteful use of water and creates a lot of greenhouse gases. It puts enormous pressure on the world’s resources. A vegetarian diet is better.”

A screenshot of the Drudge Report this morning

A screenshot of the Drudge Report this morning

What’s extra great about this article is that it showed up as the headline article on the conservative news site, the Drudge Report. For an hour or two this morning everyone who went to the Drudge Report website saw that headline as the main headline. And a lot of people go to that website. That alone made my day.

Cruelty, supported by your tax dollars

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

From a press release [pdf] I received this morning:

The Government of Canada is investing up to $9.6 million to help improve the long-term profitability of Eastern Canada’s largest culled cattle slaughter plant in Quebec. This is the first project announced under Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada’s Slaughter Improvement Program, part of Canada’s Economic Action Plan.

This is a slaughter plant that kills dairy cows that are too old to be profitable. “Cull cattle” are “spent” dairy cows who. Not only do they spend their whole lives (4-5 years of it) producing milk, we thank them by “retiring” them to be slaughtered.

From the website of Fédération des producteurs de bovins du Québec (FPBQ):

A dairy cow’s primary function is to produce milk. But did you know that at the end of their active life, when they are no longer able to give a sufficient quantity of milk, dairy cows will have a “second vocation”? That is when they will be culled. Dairy cows generally are culled at around 5 or 6 years of age. In Quebec, approximately 70,000 dairy cows are culled annually.

No happy fields for them.

The press release continues:

Levinoff-Colbex provides a key service to the bovine livestock sector in Eastern Canada, serving as the only significant slaughter facility for cull cows for producers in Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic Provinces. Levinoff-Colbex slaughters and processes 150,000 cull cattle per year.

Not only do we send these worn out dairy cattle to slaughter, we transport them hundreds of miles to the slaughterhouse. Dairy cows are often so worn out that many of them become “downers”, unable to walk into the slaughterhouse. The regulations in Canada concerning cows who are too sick to walk as good as non-existant. We aren’t really supposed to load them on the truck to begin with or transport them if they might not survive the trip, but I imagine it’s of economic benefit to the farmer to get as many of the cows to slaughter as possible.

There are also no laws in place in Canada that restrict the slaughter of downer cattle for food. So what economic incentives are there for a farmer to keep his milk machines healthy until they reach the slaughterhouse? Very little, especially if keeping the cows healthy means spending extra money.

In addition, the Canadian “Recommended code of practice for the care and handling of farm animals” are entirely voluntary. There is no law governing the transport and handling of farm animals.

The Canadian Veterinary Medical Association is complicit in allowing this:

The Canadian Veterinary Medical Association’s position statement regarding nonambulatory livestock states “If the animal is to be moved to a suitable processing facility, a veterinary inspection of the nonambulatory animal must be performed on the premises of origin. The animal must be accompanied by an antemortem veterinary certificate declaring whether the animal can or cannot be humanely loaded, that the animal is fit for slaughter and that the owner has observed all applicable withdrawal times for drugs used. The loading and transportation of nonambulatory animals must be performed in a manner to avoid pain, suffering and distress to the animal and upon arrival at the processing facility the animal must be humanely stunned or euthanized on the vehicle prior to unloading. Equipment currently being used includes slide boards and mats, forklifts, front-end loaders, hand carts, slings, “cow caddys” and stone boats or sleds. In those situations where the nonambulatory animal is passed for slaughter, but where the veterinarian deems loading and transportation inhumane, the Canadian Veterinary Medical Association recommends on-farm slaughter. Nonambulatory animals deemed unfit for slaughter should be humanely euthanized on-farm and the carcass disposed of in accordance with local regulations.” (from the CFIA website)

Note the part where they describe the use of “forklifts, front-end loaders, hand carts, slings, ‘cow caddys’ and stone boats or sleds” as ways to move a cow without causing pain. Forklifts? A couple of years ago HSUS got some footage from a slaughterhouse that was using front-end loaders and forklifts to move downer cows to the slaughterhouse. It was horrific. I don’t even understand how the CVMA can stand by and allow sick and injured animals to be hauled about as if they are already carcasses without medical care. Veterinarians should be doctors for animals, not apologists for the meat and dairy industry.

Everyone who drinks milk needs to realize that they are supporting this system. Everytime we put milk in our coffee or grab a yogurt from the fridge we are saying, “Yes, please impregnate this cow so that she will produce milk in larger than natural amounts. Then when she’s not as profitable send her to slaughter, transporting her long distances across multiple province. I approve of how the system works. ”

And we all should probably be pretty bothered that our tax dollars are being used to support industries that make a profit on the suffering and exploitation of animals.

Dear Vancouver, backyard chickens are a bad idea

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

We already have issues with unwanted dogs, cats, rabbits, hamsters, guinea pigs, turtles, llamas, chinchillas, tropical birds, and the list just goes on and on. Introducing another kind of animal that will be part pet, part food source will likely mean bad things for the chickens themselves. Why, in this whole question of whether we should be allowed to keep backyard chickens, does no one consider the implications for the chickens?

Marji at Animal Place posted a blog today about this very issue. She writes:

Chickens are wonderful animals. They’re fascinating and engaging. They form bonds and friendships, have preferences and desires of their own. We believe they can become wonderful companions. We do not believe the backyard chicken phenomenon is turning out to be in the best interest of the birds or people. That is not to say we oppose the adoption of chickens, we whole-heartedly support anyone’s efforts at providing an appropriate and permanent home to abandoned birds.

In her post she quotes from an article by Kim Severson which appeared in yesterday’s New York Times, which looks at the problems with urban chickens in the Bay Area. Severson writes: “Unwanted urban chickens are showing up at local animal shelters. Even in the best of circumstances, chickens die at alarming rates.”

But with increased chicken popularity comes a downside: abandonment. In one week earlier this month, eight were available for adoption at the Oakland shelter and five were awaiting homes at the San Francisco shelter. In Berkeley, someone dropped four chickens in the animal control night box with a note from their apologetic owner, said Kate O’Connor, the manager.

I wonder if the Vancouver supporters have considered the negatives of backyard chickens. Is there any way to guarantee that chickens will be well-cared for and won’t be abandoned or simply slaughtered when they stop producing eggs? Will people understand that buying chickens from a breeder simply perpetuates a system that kills unwanted birds (especially roosters) and that is as cruel, if not worse, than the worst puppy mills?

When the city council voted to allow backyard hens in Vancouver many animal protection groups in Vancouver opposed the motion. Not a single animal protection group supported it. There may be a few people who do a wonderful job caring for their pet chickens, but many more chickens will suffer as a result, and a new cottage industry of breeding chickens for sale to urbanites will have been created.

It’s about time we started thinking past the latest fads of local food or sketchy ideas of “food security” and really begin to care for our fellow residents of this planet. It’s the only decent thing to do.

Sincerely,

Glenn

ps. I was looking at the nutritional content of an egg, and 1 cup of peas has more protein and more iron than 1 egg. Plus more other vitamins and a whole lot less cholesterol. It’s healthier for us and for the chickens to eat a plant-based diet.

One million calories.

Wednesday, October 21st, 2009

This super interesting new interactive chart from Animal Visuals shows how many animals die for one million calories’ worth of chicken, eggs, beef, veggies, grains, etc.  You can sort it by total, by how many are slaughtered (intentionally, I assume?), and by the harvesting of fields, either to feed us or to feed animals.

Isn’t it fascinating that you can help more animals by dropping chicken and eggs than you can by dropping chicken, beef, and pork combined?

This also brings up the age old and ever compelling (yawn) argument against veganism–that we’re hurting animals accidentally when we harvest our fields, so why bother to curtail  intentional slaughter at all?  I covered this in Arguments Against Veganism, part 3, but this chart says more than I ever could have.