.... i do like a nice piece of fish as well .... but the fish may not survive 9 billion hungry predators
Owen Patterson - an MP past his sell-by date?
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An_Inspector_Calls
Originally posted by AuntyKezia View PostRe message 57, quite a lot of livestock in the UK is pastured on land that is unsuitable for arable, being too steep, too stony, or, conversely, subject to regular flooding in the winter.
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Anna
Originally posted by AuntyKezia View PostRe message 57, quite a lot of livestock in the UK is pastured on land that is unsuitable for arable, being too steep, too stony, or, conversely, subject to regular flooding in the winter.
As to the horse meat scandal, most of the blame can be laid at the feet of supermarkets. De-sinewed meat (DSM) was introduced in the the UK in the 1990s as a replacement for mechanically recovered meat (MRM) aka "pink slime", MRM was formed by removing residual meat from animal bones using high pressure water. It had been linked to the spread of the human form of BSE and the UK government took steps to restrict it from the food chain.
DSM was developed as a higher quality form of recovered meat. It was produced using low pressure, retained some structure and was regarded as a meat ingredient on value products.
But in 2012, the European Commission told the FSA that it no longer regarded DSM as a form of meat and it would have to reclassify it as MRM, which meant it could no longer be used in low-cost meat items. Therefore the supermarkets put pressure on manufacturers and they put pressures on suppliers to source low-cost meat and, horsemeat was the perfect answer. Six times cheaper than the cheapest DSM and enabling even bigger profits.
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amateur51
Originally posted by Anna View PostAnd, if its not too steep or stony the land is often classified on the Agricultural Map of England and Wales as Grade IV (as is the case here) and the only crops that can be grown on such poor land are some cereals (such as oats) and forage crops. What we grow best here is grass - which is why we rear prime beef and sheep. Additionally, if you remove grazing from heathland, hills and moors the countryside would soon revert to unsightly scrub and bracken. Grazing (more often referred to now as Conservation Grazing) is vital to maintain a rich mix of fauna and flora.
As to the horse meat scandal, most of the blame can be laid at the feet of supermarkets. De-sinewed meat (DSM) was introduced in the the UK in the 1990s as a replacement for mechanically recovered meat (MRM) aka "pink slime", MRM was formed by removing residual meat from animal bones using high pressure water. It had been linked to the spread of the human form of BSE and the UK government took steps to restrict it from the food chain.
DSM was developed as a higher quality form of recovered meat. It was produced using low pressure, retained some structure and was regarded as a meat ingredient on value products.
But in 2012, the European Commission told the FSA that it no longer regarded DSM as a form of meat and it would have to reclassify it as MRM, which meant it could no longer be used in low-cost meat items. Therefore the supermarkets put pressure on manufacturers and they put pressures on suppliers to source low-cost meat and, horsemeat was the perfect answer. Six times cheaper than the cheapest DSM and enabling even bigger profits.
Big Pharma, Big Phood, I'm sick to death with all this dreadful hyper-capitalist profit-driven rule-dodging approach to my life ... and yours
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Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View PostThat's quite correct. I'm sure Alpen will be along soon with that stupid litres water per kilogram of beef figure . . . he knows simply everything.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostAnd, if its not too steep or stony the land is often classified on the Agricultural Map of England and Wales as Grade IV (as is the case here) and the only crops that can be grown on such poor land are some cereals (such as oats) and forage crops. What we grow best here is grass - which is why we rear prime beef and sheep. Additionally, if you remove grazing from heathland, hills and moors the countryside would soon revert to unsightly scrub and bracken. Grazing (more often referred to now as Conservation Grazing) is vital to maintain a rich mix of fauna and flora.
As to the horse meat scandal, most of the blame can be laid at the feet of supermarkets. De-sinewed meat (DSM) was introduced in the the UK in the 1990s as a replacement for mechanically recovered meat (MRM) aka "pink slime", MRM was formed by removing residual meat from animal bones using high pressure water. It had been linked to the spread of the human form of BSE and the UK government took steps to restrict it from the food chain.
DSM was developed as a higher quality form of recovered meat. It was produced using low pressure, retained some structure and was regarded as a meat ingredient on value products.
But in 2012, the European Commission told the FSA that it no longer regarded DSM as a form of meat and it would have to reclassify it as MRM, which meant it could no longer be used in low-cost meat items. Therefore the supermarkets put pressure on manufacturers and they put pressures on suppliers to source low-cost meat and, horsemeat was the perfect answer. Six times cheaper than the cheapest DSM and enabling even bigger profits.
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Anna
Originally posted by ahinton View PostIt's interesting, though (and I'd not realised this until all of these things came to light) that, whilst there remains almost no market for fresh horsemeat in UK at present, horses are indeed reared for their meat in UK and the meat is exported.
I have fish for dinner tonight! 90% Seahorse!
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Richard Tarleton
Originally posted by Anna View PostAdditionally, if you remove grazing from heathland, hills and moors the countryside would soon revert to unsightly scrub and bracken. Grazing (more often referred to now as Conservation Grazing) is vital to maintain a rich mix of fauna and flora.
The biologically richest parts of Snowdonia are the bits that sheep can't get at, because they're too vertical, or from which they are excluded (Cwm Idwal). The Brecon Beacons and the Cambrian Mountains are bald ecological deserts, thanks to sheep. Beautiful heather uplands and sheep are mutually exclusive, because sheep nibble the heather flowers - you can see this quite dramatically driving inland from Aberystwyth, the heather and botanical diversity stopping abruptly at the fence lines.
Cattle grazing is much more conducive to botanical diversity, unfortunately it's largely retreated from the uplands. Sheep, on the other hand, are a woolly plague.
(I'm just going to take cover for a few hours ).
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Originally posted by Anna View PostOh, where do you think all those cute wild New Forest ponies land up? Innocent abroad you are, ahinton!
Originally posted by Anna View PostI have fish for dinner tonight! 90% Seahorse!
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Originally posted by Anna View PostOh, where do you think all those cute wild New Forest ponies land up? Innocent abroad you are, ahinton!
I have fish for dinner tonight! 90% Seahorse!I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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An_Inspector_Calls
Originally posted by Richard Tarleton View PostI hesitate to take issue here Anna ....but, if you remove grazing from the hills, what you end up with ultimately is woodland, which is what the hills were clad with before they were cleared for grazing. Scrub and bracken are only intermediate stages. There are experiments afoot to rewild some of our uplands, eg in Ennerdale in the Lake District.
(I'm just going to take cover for a few hours ).
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Originally posted by An_Inspector_Calls View PostAs well you might. Have you been to Ennerdale? It seems a tad fey to describe Ennerdale as en-route to wilderness when it is planted for most of its length to a height of 1,500' by the Forestry Commision... In living memory (just) Ennerdale would have been home to several family farms...
It's a bit late for the family farms.
Here's what they think they're doing, anyway:
http://www.forestry.gov.uk/pdf/nweennerdaleccfplan.pdf/$file/nweennerdaleccfplan.pdf
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An_Inspector_Calls
Wow! A whole 8 % broadleaf planting! Talk about not seeing the wood for the trees. Time was when the direct climb of Pillar from the valley floor to Robinson's Cairn and Pillar Rock was one of the very best; now, the first 1,100 ' is up a fire break.
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