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A little horse anyone?

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    A little horse anyone?

    http://www.cnn.com/2013/02/09/world/europe/uk-
    horsemeat-probe/index.html?c=europe&page=1

    Age verified? Country of origin verified?

    I find it interesting the label on the lunch packs
    that have sliced cheese, cracker and sliced meat.
    The label on them says "may contain beef,
    chicken or pork" so basically what ever walked
    onto the kill floor that day. What the double
    hockey sticks is in there????

    #2
    I don't know much about this most recent discovery
    with Findus in France and Scandinavia but the original
    story from the UK involving the retailer Tesco and
    Irish beef supply ABP was not a shock. The Irish (Eire)
    have a history of being the crooks and cheats of the
    EU livestock and meat trade. Larry Goodman the
    owner of ABP is the comeback kid of meat trade
    scandals. He bought a plant in Poland in recent years
    and surprise, surprise the horse flavoured beef
    supplied to Tesco came from Poland.
    Tesco too has a history of being less than honest so
    not many producers will shed a tear for them. In a
    previous scandal the NFU Scotland dna tested a
    branded Scottish Angus steak from their store and
    found it was off bos indicus cattle (ie south American
    Brahma origin being passed off as Scottish.)

    Comment


      #3
      This should drive more people to buying direct
      from the producer. Ex. Grassfarmer meats

      The wife bumped into a lady at the grocery store
      who works at the local butcher shop. She says
      (out of the blue) the beef from our farm is always
      very good. She goes on to say even our 4H
      calves are very good. This kind of blows me
      away, I didn't think we were doing much different
      than anyone else? I guess it's the angus beef and
      a mainly forage diet.

      We had a steer here that was born and finished
      here completely on grass....zero grain. Since I am
      not interested in butchering myself almost
      everybody (to date) has gone on the truck. We
      bought at the store 95% of the beef we use here
      at home. This one lucky steer got butchered this
      fall with a brother in law helping shoot, gut,
      remove hide and split. Butcher shop did the rest.
      This is by far the best beef we have ever had. I
      can see why people are buying direct and willing
      to pay more. This stuff is at least 40 percent better
      than store bought beef. Another producer I know
      started selling a year or so ago and now sells out
      their whole yearly production this way. I will talk
      with her to check out how she does the sales.

      So what is the easiest (legal) way of doing farm
      direct sales? Whole beef? Half's, quarters?
      Would avoid the presort, insurance, commission,
      trucking, ABP, and a million other fees with ring
      sales.

      Comment


        #4
        This is a topic of great interest to me.
        Currently we sell mixed quarters, and do
        not really sell by the pound (rather a
        whole $ number). We are growing this side
        of the business and I suspect may need to
        change our approach to do so. Any other
        experiences to share would be appreciated.

        Comment


          #5
          Just read the Facebook page of a friend who
          direct markets. She is charging 1.50$ per pound
          live weight at the farm. She only sells a whole
          beef or half beef. She will put you intouch with
          others who only want 1/4's. She is sold out for
          next year already. She charges 100$ deposit and
          prepayment and beef is paid in full at pickup.
          They feed a bit of grain 2 months prior to
          butchering to add flavor.

          Comment


            #6
            e mail me Sean if you want I can send you some
            screen shots of her Facebook page.

            ricfarm.7@gmail.com

            Comment


              #7
              Depends how your butcher charges Sean, mixed
              quarters take up about 25% of our cattle and they are
              a costly PIA. We get dinged a $100 surcharge per
              animal for quartering versus halves. We are moving
              away from selling on the hanging weight basis this
              year as the butcher has installed a new system to
              weigh the individual boxes as they are filled and I'll
              be able to access these online. It will be fairer all
              round charging on actual pounds delivered.
              I would never get involved selling individual steaks
              etc - ours is a simple all in - all out system with cattle
              going to the plant each week through harvest season
              and delivering 7 head a week straight from the plant
              to the city.

              Allfarmer the $1.50 lw price you quoted does that
              include any of the processing costs? if it doesn't I
              think its pretty steep for the amount of work they are
              putting in.

              Comment


                #8
                Butchering is over and above the 1.50/lb charge.
                They also charge a set rate to deliver to one of 4
                butcher's in their area.

                Comment


                  #9
                  We have been doing a few steers every year that we did with the kid's 4-H steers. We simply took four boxes and started filling, sometimes someone got shorted a piece because of the rotation, however everyone seemed happy. Charged $1600 per animal plus processing divided by 4...seemed to work. Customers liked the product, the 1/4 amount seemed to work and we were good with the price. May have to look at the price, as we have been getting this for a few years. Truly believe you can do well with this venture, however our seed stock sale are doing well so not about to change horses when I am darn near the other side of the stream ;-)
                  Just butchered our first Lowline ..impressed. Basically works out to half the meat...for about a 1/3 the cost......think this would be a real great venture for someone doing direct marketing for us old timers!

                  Comment


                    #10
                    A little bit slow this Sunday morning at the store so I thought I would check in on you guys. To my delight --- LOL --- a conversation about honesty and trust... I think that every farmer should have a crack at looking consumers in the eye at the retail level. Either tell them how you are trying your best to keep a healthy, nutritious product in front of them, or


                    explain to them how glycophates (sp) and the three R's in the beef industry are good for them and their babies. Rumensin - all good - Ralgro - never hurt you - Ractopomine --- how will we ever feed the world without using these wonderful products --- Bull shit them right in the eye rather than hiding out on the ranch or feedlot...

                    Have a happy Sunday everyone.. Better go - more customers rollin up to the door....

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Allfarmer you had some interesting quotes in your
                      posts that I'd like to give my opinion on:

                      "....I guess it's the angus beef"
                      If you believe that you are victim of the biggest
                      marketing campaign in the history of the red meat
                      industry. The Angus breed is so generic that the
                      name in association with quality meat means nothing.
                      You might get a great Angus steak or you might get a
                      Charolais one seeing how most Angus breeder are
                      selecting for Charolais not Angus characteristics. Do
                      you notice that Angus with marbling characteristics
                      are the in demand thing now? When they lost
                      marbling in pursuit of Charolais growth
                      characteristics we are expected to believe that didn't
                      affect meat quality? Most of these Angus programs
                      are based on only hide color anyway with no genetic
                      ancestry correlation. So it depends more on how it
                      was raised than what the pedigree says - when there
                      is no longer a breed type associated with the breed
                      named on the said certificate.

                      "We had a steer here that was born and finished
                      here completely on grass....zero grain.
                      This stuff is at least 40 percent better
                      than store bought beef."
                      Thats quite a recommendation for grass-fed beef. I'm
                      happy you enjoyed it although I find its hard to be
                      subjective when comparing my own product to
                      others. I use an independent taste tester for
                      comparison purposes.

                      "They feed a bit of grain 2 months prior to
                      butchering to add flavor."
                      This comment you included about a fellow ranchers
                      product rather contradicts your own findings on
                      grass-fed. Grain adds flavour? really? I thought grain
                      taste was the taste of bland - the taste of store
                      bought chicken, pork or beef. Where good grass-fed
                      beef is different is that it does have taste reflecting a
                      diverse diet of different types of vegetation. Grain fed
                      beef is mono-culture barley and barley silage flavour.

                      Now some will say they don't like the taste of grass-
                      fed and find it gamey - that is maybe true of poorly
                      raised grass-fed of which there is plenty around but
                      it is not true of the good stuff. To produce a quality
                      grass-fed product the grass skills are more important
                      than the genetics in my opinion. My proof of that
                      would be a dairy farmer I know with exceptional grass
                      skills and knowledge. I've tasted beef off a 2 year
                      open holstein heifer he raised and it's about the
                      closest thing I've tasted to my own product.
                      Considerably better than some of the branded Angus
                      beef I've tasted over the years both here and abroad.
                      You have got to understand the lignification process
                      and the energy and protein content of forages and
                      how to manipulate them through grazing
                      management before you can produce good grass-fed
                      beef and these skills are severely lacking in AB in my
                      experience.

                      Comment


                        #12
                        Ya GF we Albertans don't know sh** about grass. Guess we got 40% of the Canadian cow herd by accident.

                        Geez I'm grumpy tonight.

                        Comment


                          #13
                          You said it - I guess that's why we aren't fattening
                          40% of the cattle on grass - in fact we aren't fattening
                          0.4% of the cattle on grass. Might be better off if we
                          did.

                          Comment


                            #14
                            I think based on our experiece there is a significant
                            difference between grass fed and grass finished
                            beef. And while I know many fanastic graziers in
                            Alberta, I would say that there are very few as a
                            percentage of the overall population.
                            The knowledge may be there, but very few are
                            willing to do the application (that does not
                            neccesarily mean high intensity rotations either). I
                            think there is easily potential to double production
                            from the same pasture base with just small
                            management changes.
                            I think the grass management side is huge in grass
                            finished beef.

                            Comment


                              #15
                              Difference how Sean? do you mean in the end product
                              and if so what is your definition of grass fed versus
                              grass finished?

                              Comment

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