Cortez
Tough but Fair
I suspect that most of us have actually eaten horse meat, if you recall the not-so-recent scandals re "beef" lasagne, etc......
My point was not needing a breakdown of cost involved .It was merely pointing out that the cost of disposing of a horse is twice what it cost for an over 4yo cow that can only be incinerated and this also includes the cost brain sampling and testing! I just dont see the justification for this. The carcases from these cows are rendered and then used to fuel power stations.Re the previous poster who said disposal charges are a rip off, this is because the charges for collecting them and disposing them are huge - man hours, diesel, use of knackerwagon and its maintenance, loading into skip, paying to have the skip taken away and emptied. Believe me, when all that has been paid for, there's little money left over.
No for one I have never eaten horse meat and I cook everything from scratch pity more people don't do it, maybe they would enjoy their food more
Most local traveller families are still indiscriminately breeding. Why are we having to even discuss cultural and infrastructure change to accommodate the preferences of groups of people who are responsible for this problem.
The animals we see suffering daily in the news seem to do so because of political correctness IMO. I get sick of it, slaughter the horses wholesale, properly enforce a passport scheme or similar. People can eat horsemeat if they want, the ones abandoned & starving are not fit for consumption anyway.
'Most local traveller families' ? It is unacceptable to write such discriminatory non-facts about a specific group. Of course there are some that are bad, just as some are excellent.
I see more indiscriminate breeding coming from the general equestrian population. Some of which is not indiscriminate, only disposable.
I disagree. I think you are falling a victim to political correctness. I could improve my sentence my adding the word 'seem', but most local traveller families have stallions & colts running with mares and herds of mares who are heavily infoal with yearlings running in the herd. I'm not saying there aren't excellent traveller families, just that most local (to me) are breeding indiscriminately. How is that discriminatory?
I can also state that many white neighbours of mine drive vans or are known to frequent the local. That is not discriminatory, just a statement of fact.
It's about time we stopped being afraid to state facts in case they offend, the consequences could be that we will have a crisis for hundreds of poor starved horses up and down the country when the bottom drops out of the illegal horsemeat trade......
AS far as I am aware any new owner or indeed the present owner can lift that clause subject to a 6 month withdrawal period!Phenylbutazone (Bute), was as you say, designed for human usage. At the dosage rate, and for humans there was a risk to a very small percentage of those who were users. In the infinitesimally small dosage which is used for horses, and considering that the retained amount of the chemical, would be further 'watered down', so the risk to human life is so small as to be negligible, and of no consequence.
The claim that Bute, or it's minimal residual levels, would be a risk to human life or well being, was the necessary leverage needed, by the campaigners at the time, and to prevent or bring to an end the 'Trade' in equines for human consumption. Coupled with that was the page in our modern horse passports whereby any owner, at any time, could have an animal removed from the food chain and so deny any future owner anything other than costly disposal costs. I'm not even sure that 'Clause 9' is actually legal in that I suspect that the ruling could, and perhaps should, be challenged in a Court, but that's another matter!
Alec.
The thing is, in the UK, horse meat has always been viewed as a poor person's meal so this is historically why it is not fashionable here. Huge quantities of it were eaten during World War 2 along with meat that would be condemned today as any meat at all was welcome under rationing, and horses not in work were hard to justify keeping due to lack of availability of feed. However when rationing ended, it was not carried on.
Well, there's a lot of poor people in the uk at the moment :/
Yes. I am absolutely certain that if horse meat were made available to the general public at a lower price than beef, it would sell. Might not appeal to everyone, but it would still sell.
You're probably right, after all people eat anything from takeaways and the frozen cabinet. However, rabbit hasn't reached the mass market even thought it used to be available in large supermarkets.
Rabbit is only cheap if its in its unprepared state. If you have to pay someone to joint, trim and package it, you are paying for extra labour and packaging so it's no longer cheaper than other meats.
I guess my main concern would be if horses WERE "officially" as it were, put into the food chain in the UK, is that the n'er do wells of society would then see horses as an immediate source of cash, i.e. steal from the fields, apply for a new passport, and then take the poor unfortunate animal to an abattoir and get easy money for the meat-price. Unthinkable, but it would be every horse owner's worst nightmare.
True.I must confess to not trawling through this thread...... but are cattle and sheep not also "flight animals"? ~We eat them don't we? I agree that some cattle are flightier than others just the same as horses. Stress is not exclusive.
....... there would have to be a connection to a rendering service, hunt or zoo or whatever but it might go some way to helping the current problem without creating a market for horsemeat.
True.
Cattle and sheep are managed differently though so this may explain the less potentially explosive behaviour. They are used to being herded and being in confined chutes and areas. Flight animals can also freeze when stressed I believe.
Also most of us on this forum are more aware of stress signs in horses and identify with them because of our personal relatioships with them. A different mind set is required for farming animals v pets.
I am not saying Farmers are less caring btw.
Yes but this wouldn't cover the waste horses used for leisure and sport but might reduce herds of poor quality horses. Then again, farming under regulations costs money so I expect some would still breed quantity out in the sticks for the leisure market. The price of horse meat would shoot up.A market for horse meat would mean Animal Health would become involved and they do have power, unlike the welfare charities. This could only be a good thing.
Ah I see. Most sport and leisure couldn't go in the food chain though under current banned drug rules, recording and passport system, they'd have to go for factory use. Are you meaning they should all come under AH anyway whether farmed or leisure?Effectively, leisure animals would become 'cull' the same as an old cow or sheep so would still fall under AH if they were going to slaughter or into the food chain. Yes, costs would be involved but maybe they need to be to help regulate and stop this indiscriminate breeding and to increase welfare?