Friday, December 23, 2011

Christmas Lights

I love the Christmas season . . . I love the festivity, family, friends and food. I enjoy putting up our Christmas tree and hanging ornaments we’ve gathered over the years from various places we’ve lived or traveled. I especially enjoy the hand-made ornaments from our children. Touching them wraps warm memories around my heart. I love driving around to see decorated houses and twinkling lights in the early dusk. Nothing is too over-the-top for me at Christmastime!


I enjoy looking at pictures of family Christmas trees throughout the years of my growing up and of raising our own family. Some trees we harvested ourselves, some real ones were bought and some were artificial. There have been cedar, pine, fir, plastic and even aluminum! I remember the 70’s when aluminum trees were all the rage; they came with a rotating light disk that made them reflect changing colors. In 1975 someone gave us a silver tree . . . we kids thought it was the coolest tree! I later found out my mother really did not like it. When I look at the picture of all of the children around that silver tree, I have my memory of it, and now my mother’s. :) That tree came at a time when our family lived in a tiny two-bedroom house in the country . . . two parents, three children, an aunt, and four cousins. The little aluminum tree was just right.


What is light? In simple terms, light is “electromagnetic radiation visible to the human eye.” When we look around, what we “see” is light . . . reflected off objects in varying wavelengths which our brains interpret as color.

What is time? According to Wikipedia it‘s “. . . part of the measuring system used to sequence events, to compare the durations of events and the intervals between them, . . . with respect to the transitory present (which is) continually changing.”

If you could travel back in time to “observe” . . . what would you “see?” Technically you would be observing light . . . in varying wavelengths . . . black and white, red, green, blue, and all the wonderful mixtures.

What is a photograph? It’s a capture of light wavelengths at a certain point in time (and place.) Every time you look at a photo, you are essentially traveling back in time to that place . . . as an observer.

Remember that next time you plan to go somewhere and think you don’t need your camera. Better yet, take photos of everyday happenings! I prefer looking at old photos that show what life is like, not what vacations were like. I want to see kids, parents, grandparents, extended family, friends, pets, clothing and hair styles, homes, schools, and workplaces. It’s better to have too many photos than not enough. You can’t time-travel backward to take a missing picture.

There’s no excuse for not taking lots of pictures these days . . . digital cameras are small and inexpensive, SD cards are cheap. Some cell phones have excellent cameras. Current computer hard drives are positively cavernous. And for about 50 bucks a year, you can back up everything online with Carbonite.

Time moves at the speed of light. The only way to stop it for observation is with a camera.

Merry Christmas to all, and to all a good light!

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1960 is baby me, and the cat's name is "Cocoa."
1962 shows the minimalist style of early marriage with minimal money.
1975 displays the fad/favorite Silver Tree, given by Aunt Dian Kitchens Allen.
1983 is a tiny tree we put on a desk, out of reach of our 13-month-old.
1986 is a tree was harvested from the Montana mountains (with permit) and the two presents underneath are the most precious kind of gift.

Tuesday, December 13, 2011

Chicken Reporting

A big part of my growing up was on a farm in East Texas. We had cows, horses, pigs and chickens, as well as ubiquitous cats and dogs. When we lived on the farm with the large chicken house, I learned a lot about raising chickens. These were “broilers” . . . chickens raised for meat. The technique is different for egg-layers, but . . . chickens are chickens.

Chickens are cute when they’re tiny, fluffy, yellow chicks . . . but when they get big they’re noisy, dirty, stinky, and mean. If one chicken has a few off-color feathers, or a dirty spot . . . the other chickens will literally peck it to death. If they just don’t *like* another chicken . . . they’ll peck it mercilessly. That’s where we get the term “pecking order.” And our chickens didn’t even grow big enough to become vicious roosters with razor sharp spurs.

One of our chores after school was to check the chickens and clean the watering troughs with a sponge dipped in disinfectant. We also had to wear boots and step in disinfectant before we entered the chicken house. If there were any water or food spills on the wood shavings, we had to and shovel it out. After the chicken house was converted to a research facility, we had to feed the chickens by hand - weighing each bucket of feed and documenting the amount fed to each pen. Our research helped determine which breed of chicken had the best feed conversion. This improved chicken farming efficiency, and reduced poultry costs for consumers. (I made a 4-H demonstration speech about it and won second place in a state contest :) Farming is an excellent way to learn a good work ethic, in addition to learning the truth about where our food comes from.

Recently, ABC News reporter Brian Ross did an “investigative report” on an egg farm in Illinois, family-owned Sparboe Farms. They took a video from an animal activist, and displayed it uncritically on national news, admitting “the fox with the undercover camera was . . . in the henhouse.” As a result of their yellow journalism, Sparboe Farms lost two of its biggest customers, McDonald’s and Target.

I'd never heard of Sparboe farms before this report, but as a business major, a former farm girl, and a budget-conscious mom, I’m furious! Take a look at some of their so-called issues.

The inside videos were taken by disgruntled employees and an activist . The video of “animal abuse” does not show the perpetrator’s face. Did the animal rights activist stage the video? How about a little deeper investigation, Mr. Ross? The goal of the disgruntled employee and the activist was to harm the farm . . . and ABC news helped them succeed. Watch for massive layoffs soon, and . . . if the farm goes bankrupt, thousands of chickens may be slaughtered prematurely.


“Workers cut the beaks of young chicks to prevent them from pecking others . . .” Re-read my second paragraph. Besides, young puppies get their ears or tails cut and kittens get de-clawed when they’re very young, and that’s much more painful than blunting the sharp end of a beak, which is made of keratin, just like your fingernails.

The reporter freaked out about finding a dead chicken that might have been there a day or two. Obviously the reporter had not been to many farms, much less worked on one. If a farm has thousands of chickens, some days there will be a dead one. Know what? “Free-range” chickens don’t live as long as caged ones! Free-range chickens get more diseases and parasites and are killed by predators, wild and "domestic."

Swedish researchers have discovered that . . . bacterial infections like E. coli can run rampant through free-range chicken flocks . . . Swedish farmers made the switch from cages . . . between 2001 and 2004. Around the same time, more dead hens started showing up at the Institute. . . . The researchers found that as many as 10 times more hens were submitted from litter-based and free-range setups than from caged systems . . . . free-ranging hens had more bacterial infections (the most common cause of death), more parasites, and more viruses. They were also more likely to become victims of violent pecking and cannibalistic attacks . . .” Does ABC News want shorter, sicker, more violent lives for chickens?

Laying hens are only productive when they are healthy and comfortable. If they are disturbed, they will stop laying temporarily . . . whether it’s from a big storm, nearby construction, or a cleaning crew. The video showed the chickens jumping around and squawking in their cages in a frantic manner . . . yeah, because the people walking through with the video camera were disturbing them! How about putting a camera in the henhouse to see what they do on a day-to-day basis? They eat, sleep, and lay eggs . . . exactly what hens do in the “wild,” only with less hunger and stress. Those chickens are fed all-you-can eat, scientifically formulated, nutritious food, housed in temperature controlled houses, protected from infections, and secured against bio-hazards. Visitors and workers have to wear clean suits (an improvement from our mere boot-dipping). Agricultural Science is taught in thousands of universities, and has millions of dollars and man-hours dedicated to it. Perhaps ABC News is anti-science.

They freaked out about one dead mouse! So what? Do you know how many mice, rats, voles, gophers, frogs, squirrels, rabbits, pheasants and birds are killed each year from soybean and grain farming? Animals are routinely killed by the thousands at every step . . . accidentally when planting and harvesting, and intentionally during transportation and storage with traps and poison.

Eggs are some of the cheapest complete proteins, at less than a penny per gram. For the consumer who needs to stretch a meager food budget, this is a fantastic bargain. Why would ABC try to make eggs more expensive by intentionally harming a productive, efficient, state-of-the-art, grower? If protein costs go up for everyone, it will disproportionately harm the poor who spend a larger percentage of their income on food.

Brian Ross pretends he’s helping to protect our food supply with this story. “I never heard anybody ask us to clean the feed trays.” . . . says the agenda-driven ACTIVIST. Sparboe farms has NEVER had a salmonella incident, although ABC uses guilt-by-association when they talk about a DIFFERENT farm and a tear-jerker story of a mom who was sickened. If they care about our food supply, ABC should investigate the organic food industry. In Germany this year, organic bean sprouts resulted in over 3,700 illnesses and 44 deaths.

The CDC says people who eat forganic and “natural” foods are 8 times as likely to be infected with a new deadly strain of E. coli (0d157:H7), which kills or causes permanent liver and kidney damage . . . to the tune of 250 deaths per year in the U.S. alone. Consumers of organic food are also more likely to be attacked by a new, more virulent, strain of salmonella. Organic food is more dangerous than conventionally grown produce because organic farmers use animal manure as the major source of fertilizer for their food crops. No shit!

The ABC media and other anti-business types are the Orren Boyle on the butt of our economy. Some REAL investigative journalism would check out the animal deaths per acre of plant farming . . . or human deaths from organic farming . . . if they TRULY care about people OR animals. It’s obvious they don’t care about jobs or the cost of food for poor people.

ABC news has been my favorite source of news . . . not any longer, thanks to stories like this.

If you wish to send your comments to ABC news, please do, here’s a link: Comments on Sparboe Farms story.

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Photograph credits:
1. I took this photo when I was about 16. I was taking a picture of the calf with the heart on its forehead, and got the chicken house in the background.

2. The photo is our family unloading the hay bales into the barn. That's me on the top, lifting a bale. The kids on the fence include a sibling, foster children and some cousins.

3. Photo from the ABC news article on Sparboe farms.