Welcome to Grazing Days ladies!

 Finally, after a few weeks of waiting for the weather to clear and the ground to dry so that we could get a truck into the field, 30 one year old heifers (a young female bovine that has not yet had a calf) arrived in the Grazing Days pastures on Wednesday, 26 May 2011.

At 9:30 am, the truck delivering the first group of 15 heifers pulled into the field and dropped off 2 red angus, 12 black angus, and 1 black angus with white patches on its face. Later, at 4:00 pm the second group of 4 red angus and 11 black angus arrived. It sure is easier to get the cattle off the truck than it is to get them on one!

The average weight of each cattle when they arrived was about 810 lbs. We know that the average calf weighs about 55lbs when they are born and they gain about 2 lbs a day until they are full grown. From this we can calculate the approximate birthdate of these heifers was approximately the 13th of May in 2010…

On behalf of all of us, I would like to extend a warm welcome to all 30 of you to Grazing Days. Oh yeah, and happy belated birthday!
May 262011

This story is from the CBC:

Beef prices in Ottawa up 15% from last year

CBC News

Posted: May 6, 2011 8:56 AM ET

Read 15 comments15

One of the owners of Hintonburger, Thomas Williams, holds a notice explaining a price increase for burgers due to the rising cost of beef. One of the owners of Hintonburger, Thomas Williams, holds a notice explaining a price increase for burgers due to the rising cost of beef. Ashley Burke/CBCStores and restaurants are raising the price of beef for customers as demand outstrips supply in Ottawa.

Steve Spratt, who runs Ottawa’s largest livestock auction, said the average price of beef is 15 per cent higher than a year ago.

“There’s less cattle out and around the countryside,” Spratt said, adding that it was driving up demand and prices accordingly.

“Not only at the sales barn, but at the stores for the customers,” he said.

Spratt said the shortage was due to farmers leaving the business last year, apparently because they couldn’t afford the feed costs and low market price.

At Hintonburger, owner Thomas Williams said the cost of organic beef has risen by 30 per cent from last year.

It’s a hike he’s had to pass on to his patrons, making burgers about 50 cents more expensive.

“We were just eating the cost,” he said. “There was a break in revenue. We were behind on a couple bills. It was hard.”

Beef prices are expected to continue to rise slightly over the summer.

THE GLOBE AND MAIL

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/why-canada-needs-a-national-food-strategy/article2003989/

Why Canada needs a national food strategy

Jessica Leeder – Global Food Reporter

From Saturday’s Globe and Mail
Published Friday, Apr. 29, 2011 12:33PM EDT
Last updated Sunday, May. 01, 2011 9:54AM EDT
194 comments

 

Contrary to what it says on the stock ticker, food is not just any old commodity. As its more holistic advocates say, it’s the subject of humankind’s most intimate relationship: Food can give life and, through absence or extreme overindulgence, it can take life away.

Those who can afford to fill their bodies with it three-plus times a day use it to sustain families and friendships. We turn to it in times of depletion (nutritional or emotional) and celebration. Many of us spend untold hours watching shows or reading about and cooking up its endless manifestations.

The paradox of this love affair is that Canadians have lost touch with the value of food. In 1931, more than 30 per cent of the people in this country lived on farms. That number has whittled to just over 2 per cent.

Few of us understand what really goes into our food or how our choices send ripples to the fields. Most of us live in cities and gobble down cheap food from big-box stores or wherever else low-cost grub can be had, without questioning why prices are so low.

We’re skeptical of the premiums on local, free-range and organic – why pay higher prices if there’s a cheaper option? – and lean on takeout, restaurants and convenience meals to get us through busy work weeks.

Without realizing it, we raise kids who can’t cook and won’t swallow a vegetable. We have become the fattest generation in Canadian history, addicted to eating and riddled with cancer, diabetes and heart disease.

A national food policy is the only way to bring symbiosis back into the system. Cathleen Kneen, a long-time activist with the People’s Food Policy Project, argues that it’s even a matter of Canada’s security. “If you’re at all interested in sovereignty, start with food,” she says.

“Any jurisdiction that doesn’t feed its people is at the mercy of whoever does.”

For Monday’s federal vote, for the first time, all five parties included food-specific policies in their electoral platforms. However, the Liberals were the only ones to promise a national strategy.

England, Scotland, Norway and even Sudan have all implemented long-term food strategies, but Canada has for decades shied away from the idea as overly complex. Any good policy will require sacrifices from virtually everyone at the table, most of whom have conflicting interests.

While agribusiness and prairie grain farmers want better access to export markets, locavores, environmentalists and fruit-and-vegetable growers want Canadians to eat fewer imports and more of what can be grown at home.

Consumers generally want the best price regardless of where the food comes from. The retail sector wants to sell it any way it can, from bulk warehouses to drive-throughs. The health-care system needs people to make better food choices.

The process of hashing out the elusive balance in all of this is so politically fraught that four separate organizations, representing farmers, foodies, agribusiness, academics and industry, have set out to draw up their own blueprints for policy-makers.

They’ve taken it on themselves to map out ways to foster healthier national diets and contribute to long-term global food security; to promote local, sustainable food systems while competing in international markets.

The People’s Food Policy Project, the largest civil-society effort, released its version of a national food strategy this month, based on more than 3,000 interviews. The Canadian Federation of Agriculture is at work on the final draft of its plan, and the Conference Board of Canada is slated to release the first findings of a three-year project in May.

While no one is foolhardy enough to assume that any of the strategies will be snapped up verbatim by the next government, the widespread recognition of the need is a sign that a global movement is cresting in Canada.

“It might be argued that we don’t really need food sovereignty because there is so much food available. [But] we don’t know what will happen with climate change,” said Ralph Martin, the recently appointed Loblaw Chair of Sustainable Food Production at the University of Guelph.

“It’s during this time that food is readily available and relatively cheap that we’re going to have to design a system for more food sovereignty and more food security for Canadians.”

That doesn’t mean Canada should slam its borders to imports and prepare to grow all of its own food. But it does mean revamping our narrow view of the value of food and agriculture.

“There are some people who think that farming is about people with strong backs and weak minds. It’s the opposite now. They need to be extremely educated, adaptable and entrepreneurial people,” said Peter Phillips, an agriculture economist and trade expert with the Johnson-Shoyama Graduate School of Public Policy at the University of Saskatchewan.

“I don’t think that mindset has totally captured the imagination of our political leaders or even our bureaucratic leaders. We don’t have … a long-term vision of where we could be.”

Jessica Leeder is The Globe and Mail’s global food reporter.

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/politics/why-canada-needs-a-national-food-strategy/article2003989/

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