New Zealand dairy farmer Paul Everest stated that the calves live an 'awesome four days' and then they’re sent to the slaughterhouse.
Not so long ago few people outside the animal agriculture community
knew about ‘bobby calves’, the days-old dairy calves, mostly male
and superfluous to the farmer’s 'dairy' requirements, who are either
killed on farm or sent to the slaughterhouse. I myself became vegan
overnight when I learned about these bobbies.
Thanks to the campaigning of animal activists, the fate of bobby
calves is now well known – and it’s a PR disaster for dairy farmers.
Nobody likes to think of frail baby animals being pried from their
mothers and sent off to 'the Works', their umbilical cord often
still attached. It is little surprise that it’s a sensitive topic in
the Industry, a very inconvenient truth that won’t go away.
In the latest of a string of changes aimed at eliminating the worst
abuses and improving the image of dairying, Fonterra have stated
that from June farmers are prohibited from killing calves on the
farm, unless the calf is sick. In the news item that aired on New
Zealand TV last night, I was gobsmacked when mid Canterbury dairy
farmer Paul Everest stated “(The calves) live an awesome four days,
and then they’re down to the processor.” Yes you heard right. The
baby cows, with a natural lifespan of up to 20 years, had four
entire days to enjoy their existence, confined in a shed, pining for
their mothers, sucking milk from an artificial teet before going to
have their throats cut. Awesome? I don’t think so.
A few decades ago it was common for a farmer to take a hammer or
crowbar to the heads of calves. Once bludgeoned they were then
placed at the farmgate for collection, tossed into a grave, burned,
or composted, all M.I.T. approved methods of dairy calf disposal.
Then, in 2014, disturbing footage emerged of an award winning NZ
farmer showing farm hands how to bludgeon calves to death in a NZ
owned dairy operation in Chile. The bloodbath created a public
backlash both in Chile and New Zealand, and in 2016 blunt force
trauma to the head of dairy calves became illegal in this country.
It was still fine for farmers to kill them on farm, but they had to
be shot.
The irony is that this new law, that is also aimed at the eco lobby
who like ‘everything to be used’, will be even harder on the baby
calves. Even more of the approximately 2 million calves killed every
year in New Zealand will be forced to undertake long, uncomfortable
truck journies, hungry, anxious, and unstable on their little legs,
only to confront the horror of the slaughterhouse and have their
lives destroyed.
This move by Fonterra is dumb. Firstly, a prime time news item
talking about sending babies to have their throat cut is no way to
improve their image. Secondly, the new law could well backfire on
them. Farmers are paid next to nothing for bobby calves by the
slaughterhouse, and the cost and logistics of transporting them will
be more of a burden. Who knows? Farmers could end up deciding
they’ve had enough and go out of business.