Sunday, December 13, 2009

Is Raising Beef Sustainable?

Here is a post written by a farmer about raising beef...specifically how much water it takes to produce a pound of beef. She cites an article (one of many out there) that state that it takes 1800+ gallons of water to produce each pound of beef. I've often wondered about statistics like that one, trying to figure out how they come up with that number and if it can really be right. Numbers like that have never made sense to me, but I never sat down to calculate out what a more accurate number might be.

She figured out that on their farm, it takes 17.5 gallons of water to produce a pound of beef. Pretty sure that is comparable to the amount of water needed to grow a tomato plant in a location like Kansas, with a much more nutrient and calorie-dense end product. Hence, a more efficient source of food for humans. Not that tomatoes aren't healthy and all that or that they aren't nutritious, but you would need to eat a lot more tomatoes to sustain your life than beef. Well-balanced meals, people, is the goal.

The other thing that I always question, when I read articles or hear people talking about how cattle are bad for the environment, is the quality of the land they are talking about. Not all land is equal. Not all soils are equal. Certain land/soils should NEVER be tilled, or at least very rarely. Those particular areas are frequently well-adapted to pasturing animals. If there weren't animals being pastured on that land, then it would be completely unproductive, except perhaps for whatever wild game could be harvested off it in the proper season.

So if you want to go off on some sort of crusade about what is or is not killing the earth, at least do your best to know all the facts first.

Tuesday, December 8, 2009

No Blizzard for Us

In fact, hardly even any snow for us! I'm not sure if that makes me happy or not. In general, not. I'm very jealous of everyone that is getting large quantities of snow! Here, everyone is in a tizzy over a little bit of rain, some sleet/freezing rain, and a random flurry of snow here and there. To be fair, icy streets are really annoying and treacherous. Still, I would rather have snow. The downside to large amounts of snow here, is that it rarely stays cold enough for the snow to stick around more than a couple days, so no one learns/gets used to driving on streets that have a certain amount of snow on them. Ugh.

Pretty much my least favorite part about living here is driving to and from work when the roads are slick and the idiots are out and about driving on them. Although, I guess I can't complain too much, since I almost caused an accident myself this morning getting to work. A light turned yellow in front of me, and I didn't decide soon enough if I should brake or if I could make it through. Luckily, the person waiting at the light on the cross street saw that I wasn't going to be able to stop and didn't hit me. Thank God!

I was supposed to be going up to Manhattan and then Topeka tomorrow for a website meeting, then the Turf Conference. Yeah, it's funny, I know. Me, going to the Turf Conference. Anyway, between the weather and this nasty cough I've had for a week now, I'm going to skip out. Apparently they do actually have snow up towards Manhattan. Driving through blowing snow before dawn is not my idea of fun for work. Definitely not.

Now to figure out what to do with myself for the rest of the evening...cross-stitch, another sewing project, wrapping Christmas presents, washing dishes (or not!), find a book to read....