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The Thermapen

thermapen

"Best Meat Thermometer Ever!"

 

Eatwild News Archives


Milk from Grass-Fed Cows Higher in Vitamin E

Cows that get all their nutrients from grazed grass—their natural diet—produce milk with 86 percent more vitamin E (alpha-tocopherol) than cows fed a standard dairy diet, according to a recent study.

The standard dairy diet consists of large amounts of “concentrate,” which is typically a dry mixture of corn and soy. Some organic dairies raise their cows on pasture and supplement them with organic concentrate; others keep their cows indoors and feed them organic concentrate and stored grasses. The more freshly grazed grass in a cow’s diet, the more vitamin E, omega-3 fatty acids, and CLA. Organic Valley is a nation-wide organic dairy that emphasizes grazing.

Leiber, F., M. Kreuzer, et al. (2005). Lipids 40(2): 191-202.


Eggs from Pastured Hens Better for Your Eyes

A new report reveals that eggs from hens raised on pasture are higher in lutein and zeaxanthin than eggs from chickens raised in confinement. Lutein and Zeaxanthin are natural substances similar to beta-carotene that protect your eyes from cataracts and a common cause of blindness called "macular degeneration." They may also protect against cancer and cardiovascular disease.

Commercial egg producers add synthetic colorants to their feed to mimic the bright yellow yolks of eggs from pastured hens, A widely used additive is "canthaxantin." Canthaxantin can cause eye problems in humans. Farmed-raised salmon and trout are also fed canthaxantin to add more color to their pallid flesh. Due to public outcry, labels on farmed Atlantic salmon must now include the words "artificially colored" or "color added," in ¼ inch or larger letters. The same cautionary remark should be added to most egg cartons.

Where can you find eggs from pasture hens? Most of the premium or "natural" eggs in your supermarket are not from chickens raised on pasture. The term "cage-free" simply means that the hens are free to roam on a barn floor; typically, the hens have no access to grass. Organic eggs come from chickens fed organic ingredients. Typically, they, too, are raised in confinement. The same is true for chickens fed "vegetarian" feed. Grass makes the difference. It is rich in the natural carotenoids that are important to your health. You will find eggs from pastured hens at your local farmer's market and from producers listed in Eatwild.com.

Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry. 2006, 54, 2267-2273.


    More Mad Cows. Less Government Testing

downer cow

The third case of mad cow disease in the United States was confirmed in an Alabama cow on March 13, 2006. Mad cow disease, or BSE, can cause a brain-wasting disease in humans. The only known source of disease transmission among cattle comes from feed contaminated with tissue from an infected cow. Grass-fed cattle eat fresh pasture and stored grasses only, virtually eliminating the possibility of mad cow disease.

Prior to the identification of the first case of BSE in 2003, the FDA was testing only 55 cows a day. Following the discovery, it increased its surveillance to 1,000 cows a day. Now, the FDA is proposing to test only 110 cows a day, which is one tenth of one percent of the number of the animals being consumed.

Japan tests every cow for BSE. Following slaughter, a portion of each animal’s brain is given a rapid test for the disease. The carcasses are kept in cold storage until the test results are known. The Japanese government has adopted this stringent practice to assure the health of the public and to restore consumer faith in the government’s ability to safeguard the food supply. FDA take note.


Union of Concerned Scientists Extol Benefits of  Grass-Fed Beef and Dairy

mad cow

On March 8, 2006, the Union of Concerned Scientists (UCS), a non-profit alliance of more than 100,000 U.S. scientists, released an 80-page report on grass-fed beef and dairy products. Summarizing the report, author Dr. Kate Clancy said "When you eat grass-fed meat, you're getting beef with benefits. There are no losers in producing cattle entirely on pasture. Farmers win, consumers win, the environment wins, and even the cattle win."

Visitors to eatwild.com are well-acquainted with these themes. The significance of the UCS report is that it gives pasture-based farming the seal of approval of a highly regarded group of scientists who are devoted to promoting the health of Americans and the environment. The report committee surveyed dozens of published studies before arriving at their conclusions. The bottom line, according to their investigation, is that raising animals on pasture:

  •  Decreases soil erosion and increases soil fertility
  •  Improves water quality
  •  Improves human health due to reduced antibiotic use
  •  Improves farmer and farm worker health
  •  Improves animal health and welfare
  •  Results in more profit per animal for producer
  •  The report also validates the fact that products from pasture-raised animals are  lower in total fat, and higher in omega-3 fatty acids, CLA (conjugated linolenic acid), vitamin E, and beta-carotene.

To read the report in its entirety, click on this link.


More than 1,700,000 people have visited Eatwild.com

As of March 6, 2006 we have logged over 1,700,000 visitors to Eatwild.com. We are pleased that so many of you are finding your way to our site and that so many of you provide links to Eatwild on your own websites. We are part of a growing "Web Family" of people who are committed to healthy food, healthy animals, strong rural communities, and sustainable agriculture. Go grass!


Japan Concerned about Safety of U.S. Feedlot Beef

“We’d like to ask for an explanation as to what is going on,” Japanese Vice Farm Minister Mamora Ishihara told reporters on February 12, 2006. The delegation wants to investigate claims that downer cattle are still being slaughtered for human consumption at U.S. plants. It is also visiting a Tyson Foods facility in Kansas to follow up on reports that banned parts from beef are included in processed beef. Because of these and other concerns, Japan has banned the import of beef from the United States.


Micro-Dairy Advocates in Washington State Protect Right to Sell Raw Milk

Rules for selling raw milk for human consumption vary from state to state; some states ban it outright. One way that health-conscious consumers obtain raw milk is through "cow shares"—an arrangement in which "one or more individuals purchase one or more shares in a milk-producing animal in return for a portion of the milk that is produced." A bill proposed to the Washington State legislature in January 2006 specifically includde cow shares in the definition of a "sale," and required that all such distributors to become licensed Class A dairies or face class C felony charges.

Eatwild supplier Kelsey Kozak, the teenage operator of a one-cow dairy in Vashon, Washington, testified against the bill. While Kelsey welcomes more oversight and testing to insure that milk is safe, she felt that the bill didn't recognize the special circumstances of small producers and that the cost of meeting Class A dairy requirements was prohibitive for those who are not trying to make a living as a dairy. In her case, she would need to provide a separate room for processing—pouring the milk from a stainless steel pail through a filter and stainless steel funnel into a half gallon jar—for the 4 1/2 gallons of milk a day that her cow produces. According to a survey she conducted of the state's licensed raw milk dairies, it cost them from $6,000 – $60,000 to become licensed.

A coalition of individuals opposed to this bill lobbied heavily with their legislators over the last two months. The result is an amended bill that will help to ensure the survival of raw milk micro-dairies in Washington state and increase the safety of all raw milk produced in the state. That bill was passed on March 6, 2006. Follow the links to see the bill's history and the final version.


Mother Earth News leading the way

The October/November 2005 issue of Mother Earth News magazine is ripe with information and resources on the health benefits of grass-fed beef and dairy products.

An extensive article (Better Beef by Nancy Smith) explains the benefits of grass-fed products and details the challenges and opportunities facing today's grass-fed meat producers.

Mother Earth News is also debuting a new page on their website called the Real Food Page. Among current features on this page is data showing the nutritional benefits of free-range eggs over standard commercially produced eggs—an advantage the FDA has long failed to acknowledge. It includes consumer advice and cooking tips, and quotes many leading figures in the field.

The same issue features Kelsey Kozak, a 16 year-old Eatwild supplier who operates a one-cow dairy in Washington State.


FDA bans use of antibiotic Baytril in poultry

The Food and Drug Administration has banned the use of the poultry antibiotic Baytril, made by Bayer. Many farmers treat their whole flocks with the antibiotic in order to treat or prevent respiratory disease in the birds.

The use of Baytril, claims the FDA, makes it difficult for doctors to treat human patients with food poisoning. When bacteria are repeatedly exposed to antibiotics, they become resistant. When humans eat or handle contaminated meat, they may pick up the drug-resistant bacteria.

Baytril is a member of the class of drugs called fluoroquiolones. This class of drugs, which includes the drug Cipro, is considered valuable for treating serious infections in people. The FDA first proposed the ban against Baytril five years ago.


Mother Nature knows better once again

The concentration of carbon dioxide in our air is rapidly rising, a condition that contributes to the greenhouse effect and potential global warming. The more of the carbon that can be contained in the soil, however, the less that escapes into the air. A report released by the USDA's Agricultural Research Service finds that soil stores 2 to 3 times more carbon when the grass was grazed than when it was harvested for hay or not harvested at all.

Another benefit of grazing, the researchers noted, was that grazing also reduces costs by lowering needs for herbicides and producing income from the livestock. They estimated that even putting as little as 10 percent of existing cropland into rotation with grazing would produce significant cost reductions.

More information is available online at http://ars.usda.gov/is/pr.


It's no yolk, tests show free-range eggs more nutritious

Mother Earth News magazine has announced the results of its research comparing eggs from four free-range flocks to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) nutrient data for eggs from confinement production systems. Their findings showed that the eggs from free range chickens were up to twice as rich in vitamin E, up to six times richer in beta carotene (a form of vitamin A) and four times richer in essential omega-3 fatty acids. And, the free-range eggs averaged only half as much cholesterol.

Data and graphs are available in the August/September 2005 issue of the magazine or at the Mother Earth News Web site: http://www.MotherEarthNews.com/eggs


First native-born case of BSE in US reported

On June 24, 2005, Mike Johanns, US Secretary of Agriculture, announced the discovery of the first case of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE or mad cow disease) in an animal born in the US. The animal was over 8 years of age and born before the 1997 ban on ruminant byproducts in feed for ruminants.

In addition to raising concerns about the safety of American's food supply, the case also brought to light issues about the USDA's protocol for detection, handling and testing of suspected BSE cases. Johanns disclosed that during the testing process on this animal, body parts from five animals were stored together, a departure from accepted protocols, and also conceded that the USDA's test procedures may be out of date.

To learn more about BSE, read Grass-fed products are clean and safe.


Grass-fed meats: News that's fit to print

Pastured products have made the New York Times this year on both the first of May and the first of June. A story reported on the cover page of June's first's Dining and Wine section, reports that New York's Greenmarkets, a well known source for locally grown fruits and vegetables, are now becoming the place to go for pork, beef and lamb from local pastures.

This influx of grass-fed meat producers to the greenmarkets heralds a new dietary trend back to meat, according to reporter Kim Severson. People who have shunned factory-raised meats are adding pasture-raised products back to their diets, not only because they make for healthier and more flavorful eating, but also because they care about humane treatment of the animals and the benefits of sustainable agriculture.

Give 'em a Chance, Steers Will Eat Grass, Kim Severson, The New York Times, June 1, 2005


Meat protein does not compromise bone density

skeleton

Some people have the impression that eating a diet that contains a substantial amount of animal protein leaches calcium from the bones. This is a special concern to older men and women who have a tendency to lose bone strength. A new study of women, ages 52–69, showed that they absorbed and retained calcium equally well from a high-meat regimen and a diet that combined soy and meat protein.

Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, 90:181-189, 2005.


Plea to limit antibiotic use in animal feed

On April 7, 2005, five medical and environmental groups petitioned the U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA) to ban the use of seven kinds of antibiotics in animal feed. The groups maintain that using the antibiotics goes against the FDA mandate to protect human health. The antibiotics singled out by the groups are either “critically important” or “highly important” to human health. They are given to cattle to speed their growth and to reduce the problems associated with excessive grain feeding. Read more.

The five groups requesting the ban are the American Academy of Pediatrics, the American Public Health Association, the Environmental Defense, the Food Animal Concerns Trust, and the Union of Concerned Scientists. According to the Union of Concerned Scientists, 70 percent of the antibiotics used in the U.S. each year are fed to livestock and poultry. The fear is that the unnecessary use of these potent medications will result in more antibiotic-resistant bacteria and an undermining of human health.

Animals that are raised and finished on pasture are not given antibiotics in their feed because they are allowed to grow at a natural pace and do not have the diseases and complications that come from being fed grain in crowded and stressful feedlots.


Be wary of spring chickens

Did you know that standard poultry producers feed trace amounts of arsenic to their broilers? In small amounts, the well-known poison stimulates the birds’ appetites and helps fight certain diseases that can spread rapidly in confinement facilities. A survey published in Environmental Health Perspectives sheds light on how much arsenic makes it to our dinner plates.

The researchers determined that there was 0.39 ppm of arsenic in the meat of young broiler chickens, the type of chicken that fills the meat cases at your local supermarket. They calculated this was “3–4 fold higher than in other poultry and meat. People who eat typical amounts of chicken may ingest 1.38–5.24 mcg a day from chicken alone.” They concluded that “These concentrations are higher than previously recognized in chicken,” and went on to say it may be wise to recalculate how much of the poison that consumers are ingesting on a daily basis.

Pastured poultry are not treated with arsenic or any other toxic substances.

Lasky, T., W. Sun, et al. (2004). "Mean total arsenic concentrations in chicken 1989-2000 and estimated exposures for consumers of chicken." Environ Health Perspect 112(1): 18-21.


GMO Salmon – Coming to your market soon?

salmon
Genetically modified salmon that reach market size in half the normal time are expected to win FDA approval within a year, according to Aqua Bounty Technologies, the company that engineers the grow-fast fish. The company plans to sell their juiced-up eggs to fish farmers. If approval is granted, this will be the first GMO animal to be sold for consumption in the United States.

Will GMO salmon be safe to eat and safe for the environment? “The fish would be no different from a soybean plant or cheese,” said Lisa Dry, public relations officer for Aqua Bounty. “We’re in our 10th year of eating these products…They’re just so prevalent in our diet. I think that speaks to safety.”


Pizza dough and tetracycline

In a recent interview with a former manager of a Nebraska feedlot, Eatwild has learned of an extreme example of raising cattle on junk food. In this particular feedlot, the cattle were fattened on stale pizza crust that the owners purchased from a wholesale bakery for only a penny a pound.

Feeding junk food to animals is regarded by many as a win-win situation: it keeps waste food out of the landfills and provides low cost food for the animal industry.

The pizza dough was then mixed with powdered tetracycline. Why add the antibiotic medication? Because low levels of antibiotics make cattle eat more and put on weight more rapidly, further cutting the cost of raising them to maturity. Tetracycline is not approved as a feed additive in cattle, so the owners purchased the drug under the false pretense that they were using it to treat disease in poultry.

On this junk food and drug diet, the cattle put on as much as four pounds a day, a remarkable rate of growth at a very low cost. The end result was more money for the feedlot, more abuse of medications that are important for human medicine, and more meat of questionable quality for an unsuspecting public.

The degree to which American cattle are being fed junk food and off-label drugs is not known.


Teresa Heinz Kerry goes grass-fed

kerry

Teresa Heinz Kerry, wife of Senator John Kerry, advocates healthy food for the nation and for her own family, according to an interview in The New York Times. Well educated and outspoken, she is a proponent of pasture-based ranching—so much so that she has switched her own small herd of cattle from grain to grass.

In her comments to Times columnist Marian Burros, she said, "I used to have 80 head of cattle. I used to feed them a little grain, but now they are all grass fed with alfalfa because of studies that show that animals that feed on grass have high levels of CLAs," conjugated linoleic acids or nutrients that are believed by some New Zealand scientists to reduce heart attacks and cholesterol levels."

Go Teresa!

Read the interview in its entirety.


Grass-fed beef can qualify as a "good source" of omega-3

Grass-fed animals have 2 to 3 times more omega-3 fatty acids than grain-fed animals. But is this enough of a difference to enhance your health? Yes, according to a recent Australian study. The researchers sampled meat from three groups of animals: 1) cattle raised on pasture alone; 2) cattle raised on pasture and then switched to grain for a short period of time, and 3) cattle raised on pasture and then switched to grain for a longer period of time, the typical American feedlot model.

The researchers determined that the 100 percent grass-fed animals had higher levels of omega-3 than both of the other groups. There was enough of two types of omega-3s—EPA and DHA—to qualify the meat as a significant "source" of these healthy fats. Meat from the rump had enough to qualify as a "good source."

As other studies have shown, the grass-fed meat also had less total fat and less saturated fat, making it a healthier choice all around.

Mann, NJ et al, "Feeding regimes affect fatty acid composition in Australian beef cattle," Asia Pac J Clin Nutr, 12 Suppl, S38, 2003.


Women lose more weight on a diet high in red meat

One hundred overweight women were randomly assigned to one of two different diets. One was high in red meat (34% protein diet) and the other was low in red meat (17% protein diet.) The two diets had the same number of calories. At the end of the three-month study, the women on the red-meat diet had lost an extra one and a half pounds of fat. They also held on to more of their lean muscle mass, which helped them maintain their strength and metabolic rate. Women who had high triglycerides at the beginning of the study fared even better on the red meat diet, losing four and a half extra pounds.

There were additional benefits to the carnivorous diet. The women had a 14% greater reduction in triglycerides, and a 9% increase in vitamin B12. (The women on the low meat diet had a 13% loss in B12) The conclusion of the researchers? "A low calorie diet high in red meat seems to provide a weight loss advantage [for women] with no adverse effects on bone metabolism."

APJournal of Clinical Nutrition, 12(S):10, 2003


Grazing better for the soil than growing grain

Six Minnesota pasture-based ranchers asked researchers to compare the health of their soil with soil from neighboring farms that produced corn, soybean, oats, or hay. At the end of four years of monitoring, researchers concluded that the carefully managed grazed land had:

  • 53% greater soil stability
  • 131% more earthworms
  • Substantially more organic matter
  • Less nitrate pollution of groundwater
  • Improved stream quality
  • Better habitat for grassland birds and other wildlife

Depending on the way that cattle are managed, they can either devastate a landscape or greatly improve the health of the soil. To be listed on our Eatwild Pastured Products Directory, producers must certify that they use best management practices.

"Managed Grazing as an Alternative Manure Management Strategy," Jay Dorsey, Jodi Dansingburg, Richard Ness, USDA-ARS, Land Stewardship Project.


Rogue proteins and mad cow disease

A study published in the July 30th, 2004 issue of Science magazine reveals that mad cow and similar brain diseases can be caused by proteins alone. For a number of years, scientists have theorized that misshapen proteins or "prions," are the underlying cause of mad cow disease. Now there is compelling proof. This finding overturns the long-held notion that only bacteria and viruses transmit disease.

To test the prion theory, Researchers at University of California at San Francisco created a protein that was folded into an abnormal pattern. They injected this misshapen protein into the brains of lab mice. Over time, the mice developed a disease very much like mad cow disease. When tissue from these infected mice was then injected into healthy mice, they, too, developed the disease.

How can a misshapen protein spread disease? For reasons not yet known, healthy proteins in the vicinity of a prion reshape themselves into replicas of the rogue protein. (Think of a prion as a rowdy child who gets an entire classroom of children to misbehave.) Soon there are millions of defective proteins in the brain, disrupting brain function and creating a characteristic spongy appearance. After a period of time, a person or animal infected with prions begins to behave abnormally and dies a premature death.

The leader of the study was Dr. Stanley Pruisner who received the 1997 Nobel Prize for his work on prions. An article about the study appears in the July 30th, 2004 edition of The New York Times.


One hundred percent grass-fed ice cream

grassfed ice cream

This is not lemon custard ice cream—it's vanilla ice cream made from the milk of a 100-percent grassfed Jersey cow and eggs from pastured hens. The sunny yellow color comes from beta-carotene and similar carotenoids that are abundant in grass.

Ice cream from animals raised in confinement is a pale imitation of the real thing. In addition to having less beta-carotene, it has fewer omega-3 fatty acids and less vitamin E and CLA.

 

 

Cows on pasture produce healthier, bigger calves

Pasture, not grain or "concentrate," is the native diet of cattle. It stands to reason that cows that eat nothing but pasture would have healthier calves. Researchers have found this to be true. In a controlled experiment, 24 pregnant cows were divided into two groups. Both groups grazed pasture, but one was supplemented with a grain-based product. The calves from the grass-only cows were heavier, taller, and had a larger chest circumference. The researchers concluded that "the adoption of new management practices" such as feeding grain to pregnant cows should be undertaken with caution.

Bergamaschi, M. A., W. R. Vicente, et al. (2004). "Effect of grazing system on fetal development in Nellore cattle." Theriogenology 61(7-8): 1237-45.


Consumer watch

In the past year, a number of producers of grain-fed meat have created slogans and labels that capitalize on the growing interest in grass-fed meat. Without making any false claims, their ads create the illusion that their animals spend their entire lives on pasture.

Currently, a Washington State producer of premium, grain-fed meat is using the slogan, "From our pastures to your plate—naturally." MIssing is the part about the months the animals spend eating grain in an Eastern Washington feedlot.

If you know of any misleading advertising, please let us know!

(To read an essay about the deceptive "greening" of feedlot meat, click here)


Prions found in sheep muscle


sheep

According to a new study published in the science journal, Nature, researchers have found misshapen proteins called "prions" in the muscles of sheep. Prions are believed to cause scrapies in sheep and mad cow disease in cattle. Prior to this discovery, prions were thought to accumulate in the brains and nervous tissue of animals, but not in their muscles.

Presently, the USDA requires that processors remove the brain and nervous tissue of cattle, but has declared that the rest of the meat is safe to eat. Dr. Paul Brown, a researcher at the National Institutes of Health who has spent decades researching prions, made the following statement to a New York Times reporter: "Within the next year, somebody will make a big splash by finding it [prions] in the muscle of cattle, and the beef industry will go crazy."

Nature Magazine, May 23, 2004. The New York Times, May 24, 2004, page A16.


It's not the meat—it's the heat!

rare ribeye

Eating red meat has long been linked with an increased risk of cancer, especially rectal cancer. A new study questions that association. In a U.S. study of 2157 men and women, researchers found no link between eating red meat or white meat and rectal cancer. But when either type of meat was cooked well done, men had a significantly higher risk of the disease.

Interestingly, eating red or white meat did not increase the risk of rectal cancer in women, whether the meat was cooked rare, medium or well done. And women who consumed red meat drippings had a lower risk.

The scientists concluded that cancer risk comes from substances that are formed when meat is cooked to higher temperatures. Two heat-related compounds, HCAs (carcinogenic heterocylic amines) and PAHs (polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbons) are the main culprits. Eat your meat rare or medium rare, and you may avoid the health risk altogether.

Journal of Nutrition 134:776-784, April, 2004

Note: For safety, the USDA recommends cooking hamburgers and ground beef mixtures such as meat loaf to 160 °F. However, whole muscle meats such as steaks and roasts may be cooked to 145 °F (medium rare).


How much garbage is being fed to our livestock?

As a way to lower costs, millions of tons of municipal garbage are being fed to our livestock. Understandably, this practice is not widely advertised. Nor is the volume of the garbage in animal feed being monitored by the USDA.

Perhaps the only way to track the amount of waste being "recycled" through animals is to review the records of waste management bureaus. In 2002, in the city of Los Angeles alone, records show that more than 276,000 tons of garbage were diverted from landfills and turned into animal feed.


Grazed pasture is the best land use for storing carbon

Growing plants take carbon dioxide out of the air and "fix" it into the soil as organic matter. The more carbon dioxide that's taken out of the air, the lower the rate of global warming. Until recently, forested land and ungrazed grasslands were thought to be the best "sinks" or storehouses for carbon. The study iillustrated below concluded that well managed grazed pasture may be far better.

soil carbon

"Soil Organic Carbon in fields of switch grass and row crops as well as woodlots and pastures across the Chariton Valley, Iowa." Final Report. Lee Burras and Julie McLaughlin, Iowa State University, January 25, 2002.


Growing corn and soy causes six times more soil erosion than pasture

Farming cannot be sustainable if the topsoil is constantly being eroded. Currently, the United States is losing three billion tons of nutrient-rich topsoil each year. The graph below shows the results of a new study from the University of Wisconsin Discovery Farms Program. Compared with grazed pasture, gently sloped land devoted to soy and corn production lost six times more topsoil each year. According to Dennis Frame, director of Discovery Farms, if the trend of selling cows and moving to grain production doesn't cease, soil erosion and nutrient losses will continue to climb.

chart

Article originally available on MyCattle.com


Ready for the transgenic cow?

(2/04/04) Researchers at Massachusetts General Hospital are contemplating inserting a worm gene into our livestock. The reason for the genetic manipulation is that earlier studies determined that inserting a particular worm gene, "Fat-1," into lab mice, the animals' tissues had more omega-3 fatty acids. According to the scientists, the "obvious follow-up" would be transferring the gene to dairy cows, chickens, cattle, and pigs so the animals would produce meat, eggs, and dairy products high in Omega-3s.

Regular visitors to this site know that raising livestock on grass, which is rich in omega-3s, accomplishes the same goal. What's more, following nature's model offers a multitude of other health and environmental benefits as well.

"Transgenic mice: Fat-1 mice convert n-6 to n-3 fatty acids" JING X. KANG*, JINGDONG WANG*, LIN WU† & ZHAO B. KANG, Nature 427: 504 - February 5, 2004


Alpine milk may be the healthiest of all

Milk from one hundred percent grass-fed cows is healthier than milk from grain-fed cows because it contains more of a number of key nutrients, including omega-3 fatty acids, beta-carotene, and conjugated linoleic acid or CLA. New research shows that cows that graze at relatively high altitudes may produce the healthiest milk of all. Compared with lowland grazers, milk from high altitude grazers (3700-6200 ft) has even more omega3s and CLA and significantly less saturated fat.

Why? Plants growing in higher altitudes have more omega-3 fatty acids, fats which solidify at lower temperatures than other fats and therefore act as a form of anti-freeze. The cows eat this enriched pasture and pass the nutrients on to their milk.

Hauswirth, C. B., M. R. Scheeder, and J. H. Beer. "High Omega-3 Fatty Acid Content in Alpine Cheese: The Basis for an Alpine Paradox." Circulation 109, no. 1 (2004): 103-7.


Pasture reduces topsoil erosion by 93 percent

Canadian researchers are confirming recent U.S. findings that grazed pasture helps reduce soil lose. According to the Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food, growing corn and soy for animal feed using conventional methods causes a significant amount of this soil loss. Compared with row crops, grazed pasture reduces soil loss by as much as 93 percent.

 erosion

Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food, Robert P. Stone and Neil Moore, Fact Sheet 95-089


Scientists are trying to clone cows that are resistant to mad cow disease

Aided by a $300,000 federal grant, researchers at the Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech are attempting to clone cattle that are incapable of developing mad cow disease. Presumably, these cloned cows could then be fed contaminated feed without coming down with the disease.

We at eatwild.com would rather see those tax dollars spent on researching grass-based production. Pasture-raised cows are naturally free of mad cow disease. What's more, this natural mode of production is better for the environment, the animals, small scale farmers and consumer health. Don't clone them. Graze them.

cow headscow headscow headscow headscow heads


USDA gives consumers a false sense of security about U.S. beef

1/4/04. Ann Veneman, Agriculture Secretary, made the following statement in a recent news conference: "scientific evidence shows that only nervous tissue like brain and spinal cord can carry the infectious agent" for mad cow disease.

Not so, according to Dr. Stanley Prusiner, the neurologist who won the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1997 for first describing prions, the misshapen proteins believed to cause the devastating disease. "We don't know where and how prions move through the [cow's] body before they show up in its brain," he told a New York Times reporter.

This means that the disease may be transmitted by eating other parts of a cow besides the nervous tissue—including the meat. Dr. Prusiner has devised a test to find out exactly where prions are located, but according to the New York Times article, "That experiment has not been done..." The USDA's new safeguards requiring that "specified risk material" be removed from the food supply do not appear to be broad enough.

The New York Times, Sunday, January 4th, "Jumble of Tests May Slow Mad Cow Solution," Sandra Blakeslee, p. 10.


Grass-fed beef goes mainstream

Within the span of two days, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal recommended that consumers who are looking for safe meat choose either organic or grass-fed beef. This is a testimony to the nation's growing awareness of pasture-based farming. Most of the recent publicity has focused on the safety of grass-fed beef, one of its many virtues. Visitors to www.eatwild.com can get the whole story.

The New York Times, "Warily Searching for Safer Beef," by Marian Burros, December 31, 2003. The Wall Street Journal, "Why Blaming Canada Isn't Enough: U.S. Mad-Cow Inspections Lack Teeth," by Tara Parker-Pope, December 30, 2003.


A confirmed case of "mad scientist disease"

Mad cow disease can cause a frightening and fatal illness in humans, justifying the public's present concern about modern livestock practices. To many Americans, the fact that diseased cattle were being fed to cattle—whether in the United States or Canada—is an appalling revelation. This practice is now banned in the United States. But, behind the scenes, feedlot cattle are still being fed a long list of other objectionable ingredients, including chicken manure, stale candy, chicken feathers, recycled newspaper, and municipal garbage. The concept "garbage in, garbage out." has yet to be applied to industrial animal production.

The use of each of these ingredients is backed by at least one scientific study proclaiming its benefits. It makes one wonder—perhaps the scientists and the meat industry are mad, not the cows.

See studies about some of the "cost-efficient feedstuff" recommended for our cattle.


Grass-fed cows are not mad cows

The United States had its first confirmed case of mad cow disease, technically known as Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy” or BSE, in December of 2003. The leading theory is that cattle contract BSE by being fed meat and bone meal made from other cattle infected with BSE.

Choosing products from 100 percent grass-fed cattle is a safer choice because the animals are not fed any animal products. Their entire diet consists of water, pasture grasses, hay, grass silage (a form of fermented grass) and, in some cases, mineral and vitamin supplements. These products are safer in other ways as well because the animals are not treated with hormones, low-level antibiotics, or other pharmaceutical drugs.

Read more about the SAFETY of grass-fed products.


More good news about the health benefits of milk from grassfed cows

In recent years, researchers have discovered that some fats are very good for your health, including omega-3 fatty acids, oleic acid (found in olive oil and meat) and conjugated linoleic acid CLA. Now, attention is focusing on the health benefits of a little known fat called butyric acid (byoo' tric).

Like CLA and omega-3 fatty acids, butryric acid is a cancer fighter. Lab studies have shown that it can slow the growth of tumor cells and prompt all cells to develop more normally. According to a newly published study, feeding grain to dairy cows "reduced the contribution of butyric acid to milk fat, from 4.5 to 3.9 g/100 g milk fat, on average."

Compared with milk from cows fed grain, grassfed cows have more omega-3s, CLA, beta-carotene, vitamin E, and butyric acid.

Stockdale, C. R., G. P. Walker, et al. (2003). "Influence of pasture and concentrates in the diet of grazing dairy cows on the fatty acid composition of milk." J Dairy Res 70(3): 267-76.


1) The future of farming is here

According to the latest US census data, the average age of the US farmer is 54. Young farmers, under the age of 35, account for only 8 percent of the farming population.

milking cowGrassfarmers seem to be bucking the trend. A 1997 survey of Pennsylvania dairy farmers found that farmers who raised their cows on pasture were younger, better educated, more likely to use farm plans, and more interested in expanding their operations than farmers who kept their cows in confinement.

Kelsey Kozak, an enterprising 15-year-old from Washington State, may be the very youngest of the new crop of grassfarmers. Kelsey has wanted to have her own cow since she was 8-years old and had a fantasy of "making my own Brie." At age 12, she began envisioning "a fridge in our barn full of milk, cream, butter, cheese, yogurt, and ice cream."

This summer, Kelsey began realizing her dream by purchasing a Jersey cow, Iris, and raising her on pasture. In addition to attending school full-time, Kelsey does all the milking and makes yogurt, yogurt cheese, mozzarella, and ice cream to sell at her home-based "Fort Bantam Creamery." Customers come from as far away as Seattle, even though it means a two-hour round trip and a $15 ferry ticket. Like other grass-based farmers, she has discovered that "people are thrilled to find real milk in their area."

Kelsey is now experimenting with making aged cheeses. Her future goals include "going to France to work with an artisan cheese maker in the Pyrenees and learn how to make really good cheeses!" Brie is likely to be one of the first that she masters.


2) Pasture-raised animals have fewer disease-causing bacteria

Recently, Australians discovered that raising cattle on pasture reduced their risk of carrying a bacteria called "campylobacter." FIfty-eight percent of the cattle raised in a feedlot carried the bacteria, but only two percent of those raised and finished on pasture. graph

Campylobacter bacteria can cause fever, nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, headache and muscle pain. Most cases are mild, but it can be life threatening if other diseases such as cancer or liver disease are present. People most likely to be affected are children under the age of 5 and young adults from 15-29. Symptoms can occur from two to ten days after eating infected meat.


(Bailey, G. D., B. A. Vanselow, et al. (2003). "A study of the food borne pathogens: Campylobacter, Listeria and Yersinia, in faeces from slaughter-age cattle and sheep in Australia." Commun Dis Intell 27(2): 249-57.)

Much of the grain fed to our conventionally raised livestock is genetically modified or GM. The only way to keep pollen from GM crops from "out-crossing" to unmodified plants is to create a sufficiently large buffer zone. A recent British study found that bees transport pollen more than 4,000 meters—a much larger buffer zone than most farmers maintain. This finding "stunned the Ministry of the Environment, and a spokesman said that existing isolation guidelines will have to be reviewed."
Read Bees Confound Canola "Buffer Zones."


3) Natural CLA from grazing animals superior to pills

hand with pillsTens of thousands of people who want to lose weight or reduce body fat have been taking a synthetic version of conjugated linoleic acid or CLA. A new study shows that the pills may cause more harm than good. After reviewing 13 randomized studies, a group of researchers concluded that the pills do not reduce body weight or body fat to a significant degree. Unfortunately, the promising results seen in animal studies do not seem to apply to humans.

Worse yet, the researchers found that a kind of CLA found in the pills (CLA (t10, c12) may cause serious health complications, including an enlarged liver, lower levels of HDL (good) cholesterol, and insulin resistance.single cow

Meanwhile, the main type of CLA found in meat and dairy products (c9, t11 or "rumenic acid") has been given a clean bill of health. Once again, a natural product has been found to be superior to its synthetic counterpart.

Larsen, T. M., S. Toubro, et al. (2003). "Efficacy and safety of dietary supplements containing conjugated linoleic acid (CLA) for the treatment of obesity-evidence from animal and human studies." J Lipid Res.

4) Tigers and lions feast on meat from pasture-raised animals

tigerThe American Association of Zookeepers is now recommending that carnivorous zoo animals be fed grassfed meat. Why? It's closer to the wild game they are designed to eat and keeps them fit and lean. The Birmingham Zoo has a standing order for 1,000 pounds of grassfed beef a week.


 

5) You'd butter believe it!

better butter On the left, you see two cubes of butter. The one on the top is from Kenneth King's grass-based Kansas dairy, Jako, Inc. Despite appearances, no coloring was added to King's butter. When a cow gets all her nutrients from lush spring and early summer pasture, the butter takes on a golden hue. The color comes from beta-carotene, an important vitamin and antioxidant. Milk from grass-fed cows has invisible benefits as well, including several times more omega-3 fatty acids and CLA.

The cube on the bottom is from a well-known commercial dairy. For most Americans, this is the way butter is "supposed to look." Cows have been supplemented with grain for so many decades that people have come to expect the paler color. The fact that conventional butter also has fewer health-promoting nutrients remains a closely guarded secret. To the USDA, most dieticians, and virtually all members of the medical profession, butter is butter is butter.

King's dairy is different from commercial dairies in a number of other important ways as well. First of all, the cows are not treated with hormones to boost their production. Second, they are milked only once a day, compared with 2 to 3 times a day, which is standard practice in confinement dairies. Because of these conservative practices, Jako cows produce much less milk than today's "super producers."

But this turns out to be a direct benefit for consumers. The less milk a cow produces, the more concentrated the nutrients in the milk.

The cows benefit as well. Because they are in a stress-free environment eating their native diet, they remain good producers for years. In conventional dairies, a cow produces for only two lactations before she is either ill, injured, or ceases to meet her milk quota and is turned into hamburger.king's calf

A final difference is that King allows the calves to run with their mothers. Typically, a calf is separated from the cow shortly after birth, placed in a "calf hut," and fed milk replacer. King's calves are free to nurse from their moms and romp in the fields.

How can the Jako Dairy survive with the cows producing relatively little milk? Part of the reason is that the animals are so healthy that King's vet bills are extremely low. Also, the cows remain good producers for years, saving tens of thousands of dollars a year on replacement heifers.

But another reason the dairy prospers is that King's customers know about the many benefits of milk from grassfed cows and are willing to pay higher prices for their milk and butter. Jako, Inc. Dairy

Read more about the health benefits of milk from grassfed cows.


Read more of the News Archives...

  1. Hog factories move in; hog farmers move out
  2. A surprising benefit of eating organic fruits and vegetables
  3. Confessions of a feedlot cowboy
  4. Europe goes gung ho for grass!
  5. Pastured rabbits: "healthier and more delicious"
  6. Meat from grass-fed cattle stays fresher longer
  7. Fresh garlic powder wipes out harmful E. coli
  8. Lambs control insects and increase crop yield
  9. Feedlot diet reduces the health benefits of bison meat.
  10. Move over chicken. Grassfed beef is best!
  11. Latitude and altitude—hidden factors that influence omega-3 and CLA
    levels in milk.
  12. Want to reduce global warming? Plant a cow.
  13. Irradiate or Pasture-ize?
  14. More proof that grassfed cattle are healthier than grainfed cattle
  15. Does it taste any good?
  16. Meet tomorrow's chicken
  17. More evidence that milk from grassfed cows may reduce breast cancer risk
  18. Confirmation of the health benefits of pasture-finished cattle
  19. Women who eat dairy products from grassfed cows may have a 60 percent lower risk of breast cancer
  20. It was only a matter of time
  21. The low tech solution to preventing shipping fever? Don't ship them!
  22. Cipro's sister drug, Baytril, is being wasted on chickens
  23. Mad cow disease infiltrates Japan
  24. Natural CLA from milk products is a better cancer-fighter than CLA pills
  25. Why pay more for pastured poultry?
  26. Synthetic CLA may be hazardous to some people's health
  27. The "bad" E. coli persists in the barn but not on pasture
  28. It's not just the CLA
  29. Feed clover, not grease
  30. What to do with all that manure?
  31. Fast Track Hatchlings
  32. Laid-Back Cattle Produce Tender Meat
  33. Round 'em up. Feed 'em grain.
  34. US confinement-raised poultry not good enough for the Russians
  35. Grassfed meat at McDonald's?? Yes and no.
  36. Let them eat worms and insects!
  37. "Dark Cutters"—yet another downside of factory ranching
  38. Growth-promoting antibioticsbad for consumers and farmers
  39. Feedlot cattle succumb to dust pneumonia
  40. Pastured cattle are cleaner
  41. Seeing is believing
  42. How much ammonia can chickens tolerate?
  43. Fat cows = fat people
  44. Antibiotic-resistant bacteria not found in free-range chickens
  45. Free-range chickens are healthier than vegetarian and confinement-raised
    chickens
  46. It's got to be grazed
  47. Feedlot Diets Are a Recipe for Animal Discomfort and Disease
  48. Too little, too late
  49. Raising bison for show
  50. Low marks for US dairy products
  51. Raising animals on grass helps conserve non-renewable energy
  52. Autumn milk has more CLA
  53. Another high tech solution to a bad situation
  54. CLA in North American hunter/gatherer diets
  55. In praise of old cows
  56. Hay feeding does indeed reduce acid-resistant E. coli, says Nebraska Beef Report
  57. Why can't it happen here?
  58. Tips for buying your Easter lamb
  59. Amazing Graze
  60. A welcome source of high CLA butter
  61. Beyond Organic
  62. News you can ewes
  63. Meat from pasture-fed animals stays fresher longer
  64. In the feedlot, it's considered "natural" for cattle to be sick
  65. Lab animals fed CLA-rich butterfat have stronger bones
  66. Native grasses are highest in vitamin E
  67. Two years and Bossy is hamburger
  68. Animals on drugs
  69. How Now Mad Cow?
  70. In 1956, scientist finds health problems in chickens raised in confinement
  71. Butter or margarine? Margarine or butter? The fats in the fire once again!
  72. Wild game has CLA, too
  73. "Green grazing" brings back native plants
  74. Health and quality of life compromised by large-scale swine operation
  75. US shoppers prefer pasture-fed lamb
  76. High vitamin E intake from pasture enhances milk's flavor and freshness
  77. Dairy products from grassfed cows have an ideal essential fatty acid balance
  78. Grass-finished beef is higher in beta carotene
  79. The Fear of Mad Cow Disease Spreads Throughout Europe
  80. Animal scientist contemplates "far-out" idea-pasturing dairy heifers!
  81. The deadliest form of E. coli is more common than originally thought

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In addition, many of the postings have been sorted into four categories.

1) Grassfarming and human health
2) Grassfarming and animal welfare,
3) Grassfarming and the environment,
4) Grassfarming and the welfare of farm families.

 

 

 

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