May, 2010

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Create change – attend Vancouver ChangeCamp

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

Do you want to see real change happen? Do you want to learn how to be a more effective agent for change?

I’d like to invite you to attend Vancouver ChangeCamp and explore how we can organize to get better outcomes.

This event is not an animal rights event – but it is an opportunity for you to engage with and learn from people working in all areas of social change. Our work is too important to limit our knowledge and experience to people who already agree with us. Animal rights activist need to take our place among other social justice and social change movements.

Here is some more information about ChangeCamp:

WHAT IS VANCHANGECAMP: A participatory, web-enabled event to imagine and build new ways to collaborate for social change in the digital age.

WHY: Change Camp is a collaborative, participatory and web-enabled event that is meant to explore the following questions:

  • How can we help our governments be more open and responsive?
  • How do we as citizens organize to get better outcomes ourselves?

WHO: Changemakers! Including but not limited to:

  • People making change at the ground level – community workers, non-profits, social enterprise, CED, foundations, activists, advocates, government employees
  • Decision-makers and government leaders
  • Technologists, developers, communicators, designers, other professions

Low income free entry

If the $20 fee presents a real barrier to you, don’t let it! Simply email our Event Coordinator Elijah van der Giessen at eli@vandergiessen.ca to register for free. But be warned: he may try to recruit you as a volunteer! :-)

If you would like more information about the event and why you should go, feel free to get in touch with me.

You can register for Vancouver ChangeCamp at http://vanchangecamp.eventbrite.com. Learn more about the event on the Vancouver ChangeCamp website.

Abuse at Conklin Dairy Farms, not an anomaly

Saturday, May 29th, 2010

I think by now everyone has seen or at least heard about the 4 minute undercover investigation video released by Mercy for Animals earlier this week. Workers at Conklin Dairy Farms in Ohio engaged in sadistic abuse of the animals they are paid to care for. Calves having their heads stomped on, diary cows tied and then beaten in the head with crowbars, cows having their udders stabbed with pitch forks…

What industry allows employees to get away with this? Imagine an employee at a grocery store stomping on perfectly good tomatoes. They would be fired on the spot. But what if the tomatoes were too rotten to be sold? I suppose then, the employee might get away with it. Perhaps the manager would even join in on one particularly frustrating or boring day at work. I think this is precisely what happened at 4th generation, family-operated, Conklin Dairy Farms.

In the undercover video footage, you see Conklin employee Billy Gregg bragging to his new co-worker (the undercover investigator) about abusing a cow that was being sent to slaughter because her inflamed udders would not allow her to produce any more milk:

“we beat the fuck out of this cow, we stabbed her, I broke her tail in three place, kept stabbing her ass. Beat her. Next day Gary says, “we’re gonna send her to beef” Cuz she had mastitis and all. Couldn’t get her in the parlor. I drugged that cow. I beat that fucker until her face was like this big around”.

In an industry that treats sentient animals like production units and commodities, a dairy cow with mastitis is as good as a rotten tomato at a grocery store. And since there are about as many laws protecting a rotten tomato as a unproductive dairy cow, you can do whatever you like with them.

In the days following the release of the footage, the agriculture community in Ohio denounced the activities that had taken place at the farm and blamed it on one bad apple, Billy Gregg. He was charged with 12 counts of animal cruelty and has been jailed. Under current Ohio animal cruelty law, Billy will not be charged with any felonies, just misdemeanors. Before you start trashing the hillbilly Americans and their backwards law system, please note that Canadian animal cruelty laws are about the same – if not worse.

The owner Gary Conklin said in a statement, “The video shows animal care that is clearly inconsistent with the high standards we set for our farm and its workers, and we find the specific mistreatment shown on the video to be reprehensible and unacceptable”. Ironically, Gary Conklin was one of the guys shown kicking a downed cow in the video (at 1:26).

Everyone in the small Ohio farming community is putting on a fabulous display of outrage by vocally denouncing Billy Gregg’s actions and painting him as a psychologically disturbed criminal who acted alone. But no one else shown on the video has been charged with animal cruelty and the dairy farm has not been shut down.

It is clear that the community’s attempt at denouncing animal cruelty is disingenuous. If there really is a culture that rallied around good husbandry and condemned deliberate acts of abuse against the farm animals, why did Billy Gregg feel so comfortable bragging to a newly hired employee (the undercover investigator) about all the egregious acts of cruelty? If it wasn’t a socially accepted practice, why did he do it in front of his coworkers and why did the owner take part in the abuse? It is apparent that the precedent set by the culture around Billy Gregg is that abusing animals is tolerated, accepted and even celebrated.

Billy Gregg in court (AP Photo/Jay LaPrete)

What happened at Conklin Dairy Farms is not an isolated incident by any means. Every time an animal rights group hires an investigator to go to a randomly selected farm they come back with more than they set out to get. Even without any of the abuse shown in the 4 minute footage, Mercy for Animals would have obtained footage that documented the systematic abuse of dairy cows who are kept constantly pregnant, suffering from chronic mastitis and the killing or disposal of new born calves.

The animal agriculture industry is mostly self-regulated and it is obvious that this system is not working out. This November, people in Ohio will have the opportunity to vote for a ban on some of the worst practices in animal agriculture. It is true that the proposed law will not stop the abuses documented at Conklin Dairy Farms, but it will ensure that the animals on farms will have the bare minimum, such as the ability to turn around, stretch their limbs and spread their wings. It is not much too ask for, but even so, there is strong opposition from the farming community against the initiative to give farm animals just enough room to stretch their limbs. In fact, they are spending millions of dollars to make sure that this initiative does not pass. It really makes me wonder why anyone in animal agriculture would think Billy Gregg is a psychopath.

Can sustainable living lead to compassionate living?

Wednesday, May 26th, 2010

Our display last year

This coming weekend is the EP!C Sustainable Living Expo. We’re going to have a table in the Community section of the show. We were there last year as well, and had a great response from the attendees.

Shows with a progressive audience are great, since so many people are ready and willing to hear about animal rights and veganism. If you are going to be at the show (it’s fun!) do stop by our table and say hi. We’d love to see you!

From the website:

EPIC: The Vancouver Sun Sustainable Living Expo is Western Canada’s largest sustainable consumer tradeshow and eco-marketplace. Join this three-day celebration of greener living and surround yourself with 300+ exhibitors, inspiring ideas, exciting entertainment, and smart shopping in one jam-packed weekend.

  • Shop and learn from hundreds of eco-friendly businesses
  • Expert advice on greening your home, work and play in the Workshop Zone and on the Main Stage
  • Educational Presentations: Green Jobs, Sustainable Transportation, and more
  • Cooking demos with Vancouver’s top Green Table chefs
  • FREE food, coffee, beer and wine sampling!
  • Pamper yourself with FREE services in the Wellness Spa
  • Fashion Zone, Daily Fashion Shows, Eco-Wedding Showcase
  • Test drive a Toyota or luxury Lexus Hybrid
  • Kidzone with arts & crafts, activities, dancefloor, and a cool treehouse

The True Story of the Stanley Park Swans

Tuesday, May 25th, 2010

If you’ve spent any time at the Lost Lagoon in Stanley Park, you’ve almost definitely seen the Mute Swans.  They are large, strikingly lovely birds, and certainly one of the most memorable and defining aspects of the lagoon.

Did you know, however, that they aren’t a native species to the Park or even to the continent?  Mute Swans actually come from Europe and Asia.  To prevent the birds from spreading and becoming an invasive species, their wings are clipped:

The swans are pinioned (wing tendons clipped) to keep this introduced species from spreading to other parts of the province.  Unlike clipped wings, it is a permanent surgery.  Some may find this cruel but it is the only way to ensure that a non-native species does not spread.  (Stanley Park Ecology Society)

That’s right, the swans cannot fly, and never will.  They are essentially captives–living decorations for visitors to the park to enjoy. Yes, some DO find this cruel.  In fact, I’d go so far as to say that most people would.  I know that I’ll never forget the day that I saw one of the swans desperately struggling to take off from the water.  Destroying the birds’ wings did not destroy their desire to fly.

The fact that the swans are denied their right to fly is  only one problem associated with their damaged wings, actually.  The birds are injured–or more often, killed–with surprising frequency, generally because they can only escape danger by staying on the Lagoon.  They cannot take to the air.  Despite warnings posted throughout the area, people very often unleash their dogs and allow them to run around freely.  I suspect that these are the same people who take their dogs, unleashed, for walks throughout our busy city, foolishly assuming that they know well enough how the dogs will react in every single situation.  The swans, who are very slow on land, cannot escape when a dog decides to express its natural instincts and attack.  It happens all the time.

Wild animals, like raccoons and coyotes, have also attacked the birds, and so have humans.  A few years ago, some idiot threw a large rock at a mother swan on her nest, breaking her leg.  Another swan and her babies were intentionally doused with oil.  (Two of the three cygnets died as a result.)  People who, again, ignore signs, have killed swans by riding their bikes too quickly on paths around the lagoon.

Right now there are close to 10 swans living on the lagoon, and even the park admits that this is too many:

There are also, technically, too many swans on the Lagoon.  In the wild, only one pair would inhabit a lake this size… (SPES)

Let there be no misunderstanding here: I love Stanley Park, and I love the Lost Lagoon.  I think it’s one of the best places in our wonderful city.  But the swans should be considered an embarrassment to the otherwise fantastic park.  It’s not as if we’re lacking for wildlife–the park and lagoon are home to literally hundreds of species of animals, including Great Blue Herons and Bald Eagles.  With such fascinating creatures living and flourishing freely in the park, why do we need captive swans?

Learn more from Stanley Park Swans.  The author is clearly in favour of the swans being in the lagoon, but the website is otherwise a great resource.

Vancouver writes!

Monday, May 24th, 2010

Vancouver (and the surround area) is full of amazing, active vegans who want to change the world for the better. This makes me very happy.

But what makes me even happier is that so many of them write blogs.

Blogs are both inspirational to those of us who are involved in animal activism and an important means of getting the word out about animal exploitation and how we can live a kinder, more compassionate life.

I don’t know all of the vegan bloggers in Vancouver, nor do I likely know all of the blogs that they write. But here is my list of the ones I know (in no particular order).

Do you know of others, or do you write a vegan blog of your own? Leave a comment and let us all know about it!

The blogs

The Vegan Spoon
Only just beginning, this blog was inspired by Stumptown Vegans. Restaurant reviews and other sundry eating.

Epicurvegan
The blog of the mastermind behind The Vegan Spoon. She covers crafts, food, and the occasional bit about animals.

Sweet on Veg
Vegan sweetness. Plain and simple.

The Vegan Project
Two women who tried going vegan for a month, are sticking with it, and are documenting the journey for everyone to read.

Two Vegans on a Bike
They’re headed off on a bike trip with only what they can carry on their bikes. Hats off to them for having the guts to follow their dreams.

Vegancouver
Living as a vegan in Vancouver, with some restaurant reviews and other miscellaneous eating.

West Coast Vegan
Another blog about living as a vegan in Vancouver, with reviews of food and some other stuff.

Plate+Simple
Super happy vegan blog, mostly covering food, from a Yaletown perspective, with nice photos.

Eat Raw Vegan
A vegan abolitionist’s blog about living as a raw vegan. Some nice reviews and videos.

Eat, Drink & Be Vegan
Dreena Burton’s blog. I think that’s all I need to say.

Pope Checked
Veganism & hockey. Yup, veganism & hockey. Unfortunately on hiatus at the moment, hopefully to resume in the not-too-distant future.

Caring Cook
A nice blog about everyday living as a vegan, with some easy recipes.

karmaTALK
The blog from Karmavore, the area’s only all-vegan everything store, located in New Westminster.

Lost Swell
Birth Routes
Read Me To Sleep
Three blogs from one little family. The first is Robert’s photo blog (really great photos), the second is Amber’s doula blog (a vegan doula!), and the third is their family blog. Unfortunately, I think they’re moving away, so they won’t be local vegan bloggers for long.

Mud & Grub
Vegan ultrarunners!

Become the Voice
Vegan food, local area events, and some good posts on living as a vegan.

Heart 4 Animals
Local animal rights information, news, and events.

bjorkedoff
Evan’s blog with copious photographs of his baking and other food. Not quite local anymore since he’s off in New York, but we’re hoping he’ll be back when he’s done with school.

Blowing Up My Kitchen!
Raw veganism, with great tips on eating raw vegan and brewing kombucha.

Vancouver Vegan Examiner
Written by Genny of Blowing Up My Kitchen!. News and information about the goings-on in Vancouver’s vegan community.

Dawn of a New Era
Veganism and anarchy, plus some pretty good short fiction.

Me: Vegan
A vegan straightedge perspective on animal rights and vegan food.

Vegan Mischief
Vegan food with some great food photos.

Bliss In a Teacup
Vegan craftiness & vintage loveliness.

– Update –

Here are a few I missed, and some new ones:

Into the Eyes of God
Poetry, art, and more, focused on animal rights and human connections with animals and the entire world.

Pistachiorose
Vegan food. Wonderful, wonderful vegan food.

Animal Voices Vancouver
Vancouver’s only animal-rights radio show.

Paul Eats (Cooking & Baking)
Paul from Mojave loves to cook – and now he’s sharing his mad science with the world.

Cloverdale Rodeo is a breeding ground for violent criminals

Friday, May 21st, 2010



The Cloverdale Rodeo is taking place this long weekend.

Every year around this time, I see ads describing the Cloverdale Rodeo as a great family event.  Let’s just take a look at some of these so called family events happening this weekend: Bareback Riding, Saddle Bronc Riding and Bull Riding.  All these events involve a cowboy getting on top of a horse or a bull while the animal is bucking. The cowboy tries to stay on and the animal kicks him off.  This may sound harmless but what goes on behind the scenes is anything but.

In order for the tame domesticated animals to buck wildly, they have to be provoked.  Despite what the rodeos want you to think, these animals are not wild.  They are bred, born and raised on farms.

What makes the animals buck is a torture device known as the bucking strap or flank strap.  It is a belt that is tightly strapped around the flank area (an extremely sensitive part) of the animals. Once that strap is on, the animals buck wildly, not because they are so happy to be performing, but because they are in excruciating pain and are kicking to remove the torture device.  You can often see the raw tissue and scars all along the sides of the animals where the flank strap is tied.

There are lots of distractions at the rodeos designed to keep spectators from seeing the abuse.  For example, immediately prior to an event where a tame animal is to bolt out of a chute, the rodeo announcer will tell jokes or a rodeo clown will throw candy into the audience.  The strategically timed distraction helps to keep the audience from witnessing what is happening inside the chute.  While the audience is preoccupied, a group of cowboys will gather around the animal trapped inside the chute to “prepare” him/her.  This involves the gang of cowboys kicking the frightened animal with spurs or punching and tasering him/her in the face.  The cowboys will take the animal’s tail and wring it like a wet towel and then rub it on the metal bars of the chute to cause further pain.

Everything mentioned above are things I’ve personally witnessed at the Cloverdale Rodeo.  I’ve seen them do it to baby calves, bulls and horses.

Animals in the rodeo “perform” because they are reacting to extreme abuse and excruciating pain.  And the “entertainment” part is simply people witnessing an animal’s physical response to pain. The rodeo is no different than cock fighting or dog fighting.  It’s a modern day gladiator sport responsible for perpetuating and rewarding abusive behavior by violent people.

Yes, cowboys are violent and here are some examples of their nasty behaviors:

In 2005, a 55 year old woman named Janet Allen decided to film the abuse at a rodeo event in Australia.  In her own words this is what happened to her:

“I remember a cowboy, whom my friends later identified as Will Watson from the videos they took, throwing me around like a rag doll whilst continually uttering a stream of verbal abuse (he repeatedly called me a ‘fucking whore bag slut’). Finally he dragged me over to a filthy concrete water trough… he threw me to my knees and plunged my head into the filthy water. Both my thighs smashed against the concrete trough causing black bruises and lumps the size of a man’s hand which are still visible more than four months later. The cowboy then kneed me in the left buttock, causing bruises, which lasted for two months…”  Read More

What’s worse is that Janet’s assault happened in front of a stadium full of spectators, cowboys and rodeo security and everyone just cheered instead of helping this poor woman. The security guards even joined in on the assault.

In 2004, professional bull rider, Billy Ray Byrd, walked into his wife’s workplace and shot her in the head with a .22-caliber rifle, leaving bullet fragments in her brain.

In 2006, professional rodeo cowboy, Thomas Coffen, appeared on Dateline NBC’s news program To Catch a Predator after making a date online for sex with a girl pretending to be fourteen.

In 2008, professional Bull rider, Zeb Lanham, assaulted his pregnant girlfriend causing a broken cheekbone and swelling so severe that it was putting pressure on her brain.

It takes a special kind of violent person to abuse animals for a living and that behavior doesn’t just stop at the animals. The fury continues on to punish defenseless human victims, usually women and children.

I suppose Cloverdale Rodeo could be a wholesome family event if you want to model your family after the Manson family, but for the rest of the sane world, the rodeo should be boycotted.

Save the UVic Rabbits!

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Photo: Bruce Stotesbury, Times Colonist

You’ve probably heard the news: the University of Victoria, suffering a rabbit overpopulation problem which is entirely the fault of people, has just begun a massive cull.

There are 1,300-1,500 rabbits, and every one of them is either a released pet or the offspring of a released pet.  Most of them are tame; they’re described as being “an integral part of the…campus” for some students.  The university says that it doesn’t know how many rabbits will be killed.

(From Greenmuze.com: )

Animal rights’ activist Roslyn Cassells has been working to raise awareness about the possibility of a cull and wants the University of Victoria to continue to explore options of finding homes for the rabbits. She worries that the university has been deliberately preparing a disinformation campaign to soften up the public into accepting a cull.

“As I looked further in to this, I felt the university had no intention of letting the animals live and in fact were manufacturing disinformation. The university’s desire to maintain the appearance of doing due diligence on the rabbit issue, without any genuine interest in, or intention of, diverting from their planned course of killing the rabbits,” explains Cassells in a telephone interview. “The university continually refers to its ‘attempts’ or other’s ‘failed’ attempts at resolving the problem using non-lethal means and holds this up as their justification for now promoting a kill.”

The BC SPCA is against the cull, and they are currently asking pet stores to sell only sterilized rabbits.  This is a ridiculous, ridiculous situation which is caused entirely by people who are–let’s be honest–complete morons.  They bought cute little bunnies at Easter time for the kids, but when the full-grown rabbits became too expensive or too time-consuming or too boring, they “set them free”, essentially dumping pets who for their entire lives have only known a house or even in a cage into a completely new world.

Most of the time, these rabbits die.  Some, like the UVic rabbits, are dropped off in a spot popular for rabbit abandonment–thus, more manage to survive long enough to produce offspring.  The fault is entirely completely upon humans with very little sense and very little compassion.

Do you want to help the bunnies?

Please call and email!  Protest the killing of hundreds of tame rabbits:

Managing the cull:

Tom Smith
Executive Director, Facilities Management
University of Victoria
Tel.250-721-7592

Office of the President:
Tel: 250-721-7002
E-mail: pres@uvic.ca

People in the Office
Ludgard De Decker
Director, Office of the President
Tel: 250-721-7004
E-mail: ldedec@uvic.ca

Ased Said
Projects Officer, Office of the President
Tel: 250-721-7003
E-mail: presproj@uvic.ca

Shari Winter
Administrative Assistant to the President
Tel: 250-721-7002
E-mail: presadmn@uvic.ca

Nieves Forcada
Secretary, Office of the President
Tel: 250-721-7005
E-mail: pressec1@uvic.ca

Please send letters to the Vancouver Sun as well: sunletters@vancouversun.com (Re: UVic begins rabbit cull with lethal injections, May 17)

Help Animals Affected by Oil Spill

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

The timing of the spill, National Audubon reported Wednesday, could not be worse for birds, which are now nesting and therefore especially vulnerable in many of the places where the oil could come ashore. Said an Audubon bird conservation director: “We have to hope for the best, but prepare for the worst, including a true catastrophe for birds.” (Birder’s World)

You’ve certainly heard by now about the enormous oil spill spreading in the Gulf of Mexico.  It’s shaping up to be a major environmental disaster, likely even worse than the Exxon-Valdez spill.

The first recovered bird, a gannet, from the International Bird Rescue Response Team blog

What makes this particular spill even more dangerous than it would be otherwise?  The shores of Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana and Florida, where the oil has spread, are home to important nesting areas for thousands of shorebirds, many of whom are endangered.  Also affected are major stopovers and wintering areas for migratory birds. Approximately 400 species are threatened by this catastrophe.

There aren’t many of us who can travel across the continent to actively participate in the clean-up effort–so what can we do?

Jasmin Singer of Farm Sanctuary has written a helpful post at her blog, the Hen House:

Kelly Overton and his organization, People Protecting Animals and Their Habitats (PATH), have determined a need for logistical, supply and rescue support that will be needed for months to come. Our Hen House will be following Kelly’s rescue efforts and consistently speaking with him while he is on the gulf coast, from where he will be able to provide information on how you can help the rescue efforts. (more…)

Some groups are suggesting that people buy Dawn dish detergent, since Dawn claims to give some portion of every purchase towards wildlife rescue efforts.  You’ve probably seen the commercials, which feature cheerful, breezy music over a montage of a oiled duckling being cleaned and set free.   (Note that at the bottom of the ad, the small text admits that this is a simulation, which means that they covered a perfectly healthy duckling in some kind of gunk and then washed him off on camera.  Nice.)

What they don’t mention in the commercial is that Dawn is owned by Procter & Gamble, one of the most notorious animal testers on the planet.   Maybe it’s just me, but I’m just not into supporting a company who has no qualms about killing millions of animals when it’s just not necessary.

So what can you do?

  • Do you own a salon or a pet grooming business?  Do you have a collection of old nylons or pantyhose you can’t wear anymore?  Hair soaks up oil very effectively, and nylons can be stuffed with loose hair clippings. Donate them to Matter of Trust.
  • The National Wildlife Fund has put together a form letter asking US President Obama to take action in restoring Louisiana wetlands affected by the spill.  International signatures are accepted.
  • …and the Sierra Club has put together a similar letter asking for a halt of offshore drilling.  Again, international signatures are okay.

Whatever you do, do something!

https://online.nwf.org/site/Advocacy?cmd=display&page=UserAction&id=1095&autologin=true&s_src=OilSpillPage

International Respect for Chickens Day

Tuesday, May 4th, 2010

Today is International Respect for Chickens Day, an event “to celebrate chickens throughout the world and protest the bleakness of their lives in farming operations.”

Begun in 2005 by United Poultry Concerns, International Respect for Chickens Day is quickly becoming an annual tradition for animal rights activists.  Chickens are by far the most abused animals on the planet–in the US alone, 287 are killed every single second.

In Canada, 19 million chickens languish in battery cages.  Some chickens are described as “free range”, “organic”, or “humane”–but some never even go outside, and when they don’t lay enough eggs to make a profit, they are slaughtered.  And in every egg farm, male chicks are killed soon after hatching.  That means that every hen born to lay an egg, a male chick was suffocated in a plastic bag with his brothers or ground up alive, as is industry standard.

Try to imagine life in a battery cage:

Now imagine a world in which chickens are treated as friends, not food:

From United Poultry Concerns:

Please take time today to speak out for the chickens and hold a thought for them as you go about your daily activities. Show people you care about these wonderful birds. Help others to see chickens as you do – as friends, not food.


Just one week to Mother’s Day! Do you have your Cow Ribbon?

Saturday, May 1st, 2010


3 weeks ago the Mother’s Day Cow Ribbon campaign was launched. Since then we’ve mailed out ribbons to people all over Canada and the United States and as far away as the UK, Singapore, and Australia. People everywhere want to speak out for dairy cows this Mother’s Day.

And for good reason.

Dairy cows lose babies every year, one after the other, until the premature and horrible end of their life. Those babies never get to know their mothers. And their mothers never get to know their babies.

Send a Mother’s Day ecard

Change your facebook profile picture to one of these special graphics

Tell your friends about the Cow Ribbon

Share this on Twitter

Wear your cow ribbon on Mother’s Day (May 9) and show your support for the mothers of the dairy industry.  The goal is to have hundreds of people wearing ribbons on Mother’s Day and thousands of people getting ecards, reading messages on facebook, and more.

This mother’s day, wear your cow ribbon as a symbol of your concern for these suffering and abused mothers. Please take a stand and speak out for them. Every mother deserves to know and love her children, don’t you think?

The Cow Ribbon campaign has been written up in a few blogs you might want to check out:

About.com Animal Rights blog: “Cow Ribbon for Mother’s Day”
http://animalrights.about.com/b/2010/04/29/cow-ribbon-for-mothers-day.htm

Our Hen House: “Cow Ribbon. Brilliant.”
http://www.ourhenhouse.com/2010/04/cow-ribbon-brilliant

Striking at the Roots: “Campaign Raises Awareness About Forgotten Mothers”
http://strikingattheroots.wordpress.com/2010/04/27/campaign-raises-awareness-about-forgotten-mothers/

bjorkedoff: “Today Is Brought to You By the Letter ‘C’-Cow Ribbons,
Canadians, Cookies, Coffee, Coffee Cake!, Chocolates, Carrot Cake Ice Cream,
Candle 79, Cinnamon,ETC”
http://bjorkedoff.blogspot.com/2010/04/today-is-brought-to-you-by-letter-c-cow.html