Posted on 09/25/2012 4:47:58 AM PDT by Abathar
Another good thing for me is that shotguns are a bit like ball point pens and wristwatches. That is, the functional difference between the best you can buy and the bargain brands is real but slight.
I LOVE those shows.
Remember the good old days when the big complaint was ‘paying farmers not to plant’?
Of course it was far more complicated than that and the truth boiled down to a ‘cheap food for consumers’ program by the government. That worked for, what, 5 decades?
Cheap food, and poor farmers.
I remember telling a lot, and I do mean a lot, of Freepers that if things ever turned to where the farmer had the financial freedom to opt out of the government programs they’d do it in a heartbeat, and the Freepers would be bitching about food prices.
Now grain farmers are actually starting to make the kind of money that normal businessmen who invest millions, work long, long days, and take big risks make.
At least we don’t have to ‘pay farmers not to plant’ anymore.
As a retired farmer, I think the new system is fairer, but as I predicted not so many years ago, the gripes continue.
Why does it have to be corn that is fed to pigs? How about slop which is basically food scraps mixed with milk. Andrew Zimmern did a show about Las Vegas and featured a hog rancher who got free food scrap left over from the Las Vegas buffets. He boiled up the scrap and then fed them to the hogs who were later slaughtered and sent back as ham, bacon, and ribs to the same Las Vegas buffets where he got his food scrap. An endless cycle.
a few small scale feed lots can do this, but the big ones we rely on for the huge volumes wouldn’t work, the logistics would be too big to overcome. They feed corn and soy because it stores indefinitely, doesn’t need sterilization almost daily and is far cheaper to process than something that spoils in a day. We have some pig farmers around us, and if there was a cheaper or easier way to make a buck by feeding the pigs slop vs. grains they would do it in a heartbeat.
But we still do, which is why we have all of these gentleman farmers who own vast tracts of land and have never plowed a single furrow
There is government money out there in those unplanted field just waiting for these rich men to fill out the forms saying they are farmers.
When I was a kid the garbage man was a hog farmer.
Our uneaten food became food for his hogs. Of course this meant that we separated our food waste from other waste.
This was a good deal for the garbage man. He was paid a small amount monthly for picking up the garbage and he paid nothing to feed his pigs.
We burned our other waste in a 55 gallon steal drum which was hauled to the dump about every other year.
It was a great system. Dumps could be much smaller and it was recycling that actually worked.
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