You Are What Your Animals
Eat
By: Jo Robinson, investigative
reporter and New York Times best-selling writer. Jo Robinson is
the originator and primary researcher of www.eatwild.com, a
science-based website that details the benefits of raising animals on
pasture. She is also the author of Pasture Perfect, the Far-Reaching Benefits
of Choosing Meat, Eggs, and Dairy Products from Grass-Fed Animals.
In my investigation into pasture-based farming, I've stumbled
upon an
alarming state of affairs: few animal scientists see any link between
animal feed and human food. "Feed animals anything you want," say the
experts, "and it makes no difference to their meat, milk, or eggs."
Because of this mindset, our animals are being fed just about anything
that enhances the bottom line, including chicken feathers, sawdust,
chicken manure, stale pizza dough, potato chips, and candy bars.
Here's a glaring example. A 1996 study explored the desirability of
feeding stale chewing gum to cattle.(1) Amazingly, the gum was still in
its aluminum foil wrappers. Wonder of wonders, the experts concluded
that bubblegum diet was a net benefit---at least for the producers. I
quote: "Results of both experiments suggest that [gum and packaging
material] may be fed to safely replace up to 30% of corn-alfalfa hay
diets for growing steers with advantages in improving dry matter intake
and digestibility." In other words, feed a steer a diet that is 30
percent bubblegum and aluminum foil wrappers, and it will be a more
efficient eater. With a nod to public safety, the researchers
did
check
to see how much aluminum was deposited in the various organs of the
cattle. Not to worry. The aluminum content was "within normal expected
ranges." As always, there was no mention of the nutritional content of
the resulting meat.
When I first read the bubblegum studies, I assumed
that no one would actually feed bubblegum to their animals, despite the
"positive outcome" of the research.. Then a professor of animal science
drove me by a Beechnut gum factory in upstate New York where dairy
farmers bought truckloads of bubble gum to feed to their cows.
The view
from the other side of the fence is just as sobering. Most experts in
human nutrition are equally blind to the feed/food connection. To them,
beef is beef, eggs are eggs, and milk is milk. Thus, when the USDA says
"eat less red meat," the edict applies to all red meat, whether it's a
fatty steak from a grainfed cow, or a lean steak from a grassfed cow
with its invisible bounty of omega-3s, vitamin E, beta-carotene, and
CLA.
I've spent the past four years trying to forge the missing link
between animal and human nutrition. It's been tough going, especially
when it comes pasture-raised animals because virtually all the studies
focus on feedlot animals. To fill in the gap, I've searched through
yellowing journals published before the advent of factory farming,
pieced together small studies financed by farmers, and combed through
the research from Ireland, Australia, and New Zealand—parts
of the world where animals are still kept home on the range.
Finding the amount of vitamin E in grassfed meat has been one of my
biggest challenges. I began tthe search when I learned that grass has
20 times more vitamin E than corn or soy. Given the magnitude of this
difference, I reasoned that meat from grassfed animals must have an
extra helping of vitamin E.
At long last, I located one American study
that broached the subject. The impetus for the study came from
disgruntled Japanese buyers who complained that American beef spoiled
more quickly than Australian free-range beef. Knowing that vitamin E
helped prolong shelf life, the American researchers investigated the
amount of vitamin E in the two types of meat. Lo and behold, they
discovered that the meat from grassfed cattle had three to four times
more vitamin E than feedlot beef, thanks to all that vitamin E-rich
grass.
Now, what did the researchers do with this finding? True to form, they
began studying how much synthetic vitamin E to add to synthetic feedlot
diets. I doubt that it even occurred to them to investigate
pasture-based ranching.
Why this lack of interest in the natural model? Much of our animal
research is funded by commercial interests—specifically the
grain, chemical, pharmaceutical, farm equipment, and meat-packing
companies. Together, these vertically integrated behemoths have a
multi-billion dollar stake in perpetuating factory farming. The USDA,
meanwhile, aids and abets the feedlot industry by focusing virtually
all of its efforts—and our tax dollars!—on tweaking
the system. For example, the USDA Meat and Animal Research Center in
Lincoln, Nebraska, is more willing to spend $100,000 researching how
quickly feedlot manure seeps into the water table than to spend a
similar amount of money investigating pasture-based ranching, the
holistic model that keeps the contamination from happening in the first
place.
What will it take to draw more scientific attention to
pasture-based ranching? Pressure from an enlightened public. And what
will it take to enlighten the public? The national media.
I have a
fantasy how this might happen. First, a prominent media source such as
"60 minutes" or The New York Times will decide to spotlight
pasture-based farming. Building on this ground-breaking work, an
award-winning TV producer will create a documentary that deepens the
discussion. The program will conclude—as it
must—-that raising animals on pasture is better for
consumers, the animals, the environment, and small farmers. Before
long, dozens of news shows, newspapers, and magazines will follow suit.
As the momentum builds, grassfarming will become the talk of the town.
Serving organic meat won't win points in Los Angeles anymore unless
it's grassfed as well. Meanwhile, Ted Turner will stop sending all of
his bison to feedlots to be fattened like cattle, and by 2005, his
"Turner Reserve Grassfed Bison" will be the thing to serve at celebrity
gatherings. Propelled by this groundswell of interest, private and
government institutions will finally devote more time, money and energy
to exploring pasture-based farming.
Will grassfarming ever become the darling of the media? Only time will
tell. But even if the media misses the boat, the good news about
grassfarming will keep spreading on the grassroots level, one satisfied
customer at a time!
1) Wolf, B. W., L. L.
Berger,
et al. (1996). "Effects of feeding a
return chewing gum/packaging material mixture on performance and
carcass characteristics of feedlot cattle." J Anim Sci 74(11): 2559-65.
Note: I wrote this article in 2000. Since then, pasture-based farming
has been featured in: The Smithsonian, The New York Times, The
Washington
Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Dallas Morning News, Mother Earth
News,
Wine Spectator, The Oregonian, The LA Times, The San Francisco
Chronicle,
CBC News Marketplace, Delicious Living House and Garden, The Atlantic
Monthly, The National Review, National Public Radio
Back to
Grass-Fed Page
www.eatwild.com
Contact Us:
danielle@fullcirclechild.com