niagaraduval
Well-Known Member
After a heated discussion with my dad earlier involving the cull in Ireland, The majority of owners send their beloved horses to the meat man when they are no longer able to keep them (can't finance them, Injured,old horse etc..). I was outraged by this as it is just not in his nature to say such a thing (or even think it for that matter).
He said when horses are too old to serve their place in society they should be shipped out on a meat truck and be slaughtered to make sausages. Now, He always worked on a farm so this is obviously what happens to cattle, but a horse? A horse is just not bred to be slaughtered when it can no longer work. His reasoning was that it will end up dying anyway so you might as well get something from it.
I was so shocked to hear this I honestly thought he might have been a dodgy dealer or something.
In his eyes cattle serve the same purpose as horses, they are there to serve society and then once they are too old they should be killed for meat. I totally disagree with him 100%. Now, living in France, They do sell horse meat (Less and less is on the shelves though) and he has never eaten horse and he said he never will, not because it's a horse, but he simply chooses not to.
He couldn't stop stressing about how humanely it is done, I couldn't stress enough about how inhumane the transport and care was for the horses on a one way trip.
So all in all he came to the conclusion that slaughter houses for horses should be reopened in England, now being totally against horse slaughter (Although there is a major horse problem) I would personally be horrified to see slaughter houses opening in England, as horse slaughter is illegal in England and has been since about the 70s.
He later implied that owners who could no longer keep the horse sent it to the knackers yard to be humainly slaughtered (Live export over seas!!), and would send their horse for meat instead of putting it to sleep.
When I explained that it's wrong and that horse owners put their horses to sleep instead of on a meat truck, he said I was wrong.
He actually seemed to be surprised to hear that I would put my horse to sleep when his time came.
Am I missing something here or is it common for owners to put there trusty steeds on a meat truck when they no longer serve a purpose?
He said when horses are too old to serve their place in society they should be shipped out on a meat truck and be slaughtered to make sausages. Now, He always worked on a farm so this is obviously what happens to cattle, but a horse? A horse is just not bred to be slaughtered when it can no longer work. His reasoning was that it will end up dying anyway so you might as well get something from it.
I was so shocked to hear this I honestly thought he might have been a dodgy dealer or something.
In his eyes cattle serve the same purpose as horses, they are there to serve society and then once they are too old they should be killed for meat. I totally disagree with him 100%. Now, living in France, They do sell horse meat (Less and less is on the shelves though) and he has never eaten horse and he said he never will, not because it's a horse, but he simply chooses not to.
He couldn't stop stressing about how humanely it is done, I couldn't stress enough about how inhumane the transport and care was for the horses on a one way trip.
So all in all he came to the conclusion that slaughter houses for horses should be reopened in England, now being totally against horse slaughter (Although there is a major horse problem) I would personally be horrified to see slaughter houses opening in England, as horse slaughter is illegal in England and has been since about the 70s.
He later implied that owners who could no longer keep the horse sent it to the knackers yard to be humainly slaughtered (Live export over seas!!), and would send their horse for meat instead of putting it to sleep.
When I explained that it's wrong and that horse owners put their horses to sleep instead of on a meat truck, he said I was wrong.
He actually seemed to be surprised to hear that I would put my horse to sleep when his time came.
Am I missing something here or is it common for owners to put there trusty steeds on a meat truck when they no longer serve a purpose?