The January 25 issue of Time magazine had two articles that jumped out at me in a ‘well duh’ way.  They compliment each other and I don’t think it was intentional.

The first article, Save the Planet: Eat More Beef, discusses the planet saving impact of eating grass-fed beef.  Anyone who has been following any kind of paleo eating program already knows this.  If you’ve watched Food, Inc. you’ve seen this (one-sided) debate unfold on screen.  Raising livestock on what they are designed to eat is good for them, the earth and for us.  For all of the efficiency of the factory farms, they are horrible for everyone but the company owners.  Pick up a copy of  The Omnivore’s Dilemma and read about, among other very interesting and stomach churning things, the concept of rotational grazing and its benefits to the land, the animals and those of us up the food chain who eat the animals who ate that grass.  Grass fed animals produce LESS gas because they are eating what they are designed to eat and the entire process of rotational grazing captures carbon from the air and puts it into a useful format in the ground.  HUH!  Not only is rotational grazing better for the environment in that there is the reduction of gasses and the capture of gasses but the fat profile of grass fed beef in particular is better for you.  Grains are inflammatory as they are high in Omega-6 fatty acids.  And if the cow is eating foods that irritate its system and is inflammatory by its very nature then those negative and inflammatory properties carry over into its tissues.  Grain-fed beef anyone?  Cows that eat grass, live out in the sun (increased vitamin D) and do their beneficial part in improving our planet also have a positive Omega-3 fat profile that is anti-inflammatory and good for us.  Those are wins all around!

Photo courtesy of Yonder Way Farm and their actual cows eating actual grass out in the sun.  Lucky cows!

The second article, The Trouble With Fish Oil,  talked about our increase in consumption of fish oil, needed as a source of Omega 3 fatty acids, effecting the balance of the ocean’s fish population.  To compensate for our inflammatory grain based diets we need to consume ever increasing amounts of fish oils.  Previously we were tapping larger fish higher up the food chain for this benefit (salmon especially) but we’ve begun to look closer t0 the beginning, at the smaller feeder fish to get the healthy oils and, hopefully, avoid the mercury found in the bigger fish.  While we are avoiding the mercury we are now in competition with every fish population up the line that also feeds on these small fish.  To the victor goes the spoils, right?  We are causing imbalances in the eco-system with our meddling. Anyone notice how the wild fish that we can’t mess with have healthy, positive Omega-6 fat profiles where the farm-raised fish that we pull out of their natural environment (and feed grains!) have unhealthy, negative Omega-3 fat profiles?  It should make you think.

See where I’m going with this?  If we are treating our food animals better via letting them actually graze as they were designed to on healthy grasses out in the sun then they are becoming healthy sources of good fats, vitamins and protein.  If we are getting good fats from the beef that we consume then we do not need as much or any additional fish oil for healthy fat which puts systems back in place.  If our government really had our health on the top of their list of concerns they would do something about factory farms.  That’s a big giant if.  And crazy talk.  Our government is not in the business of actually helping the populace.  It is up to each of us to be our own caregiver and do our part.  Educate yourself, eat healthy and support your local grass-fed farmer.

Eat more beef, save the planet.

Okay…that’s a very simplistic thought and grand start to this post but the idea is a solid one.  Eating beef IS good for you and the planet but only if the animals are raised right.

If you’ve watched Food, Inc. or read Michael Pollan’s Omnivore’s Dilemma you’ve seen the negative side of cheap meat.  Factory farms are taking nature and systematizing it in such a way that every aspect of the process is ultimately a negative to the planet.  The list of offenses, wrongs and horrors in factory farming is so long and depressing that it threatens to make me forget the point of this post which is the good that can come from raising animals in a positive way.

So the positives:
1.  Did you know that cow manure fertilizes the grass they eat and as the cows trample it into the soil they are reducing their carbon footprints by keeping the carbon in the ground and out of the air.  This makes the cows happy, I’m sure.  Since their biological waste is the fertilizer then no fertilizer is needed to be added to the soil, no fossil fuels burned transporting any unneeded fertilizer and no chemicals to worry about.  Cool.

2.  Grass-fed animals live in the sun.  This gives the end products that we eat from them…meat, eggs, milk…higher levels of vitamin D.  Vitamin D is needed for strong bones.  No need to add extra vitamins to the shopping list if you’re eating outside animals.  (Heat processing of milk will be a later post.)

3.   Grass-fed animals have an ideal ratio of Omega 3 to Omega 6 fatty acid profile.  When cows live on grains (at best) on factory farms their fat profile is for crap.  If you will remember from the nutrition clinics, Omega 3 Fatty Acids are anti-inflammatory and Omega 6 Fatty Acids are inflammatory.  They are needed in balance but our grain based diets have our systems completely unbalanced toward the inflammatory side in an unhealthy, at best, 10-1 ratio.

Everyone and their doctor are recommending that we supplement with fish oil to correct this problem; however, this creates a problem of its own.  We are over-fishing the very life savers that we need to correct our little grain habit and that is causing a rise in algae blooms and dead water in our oceans.  Skip the cheap junk meat and you can skip most of the supplements also.

4.  Rotational grazing leads to healthier animals, healthier land and a healthier planet.  Rotational grazing allows the land to not be over-grazed by moving the animals from section to section, staying always on grasses mid-cycle which causes the grass to grow more dense which makes more for the animals and around and around it goes.

This is a very simplistic start to a whole “benefits of being smart about what we eat and how we manage our planet” conversation.  There will be more posts in the future but check out the links in the paragraphs above in the mean time.  There are so many things wrong with our food supply and so many things right.

Educate thy self!

Lana told us about Food, Inc. waaaayy back and forever ago.  She went to see it in the limited showing here in Houston.  All raves and great information.  It’s been a little while.

We didn’t make time at the time to see it and instead picked up the various books associated with it…The Omnivores Dilemma and In Defense of Food by Michael Pollan, and Food, Inc. the book.  The movie, while a fantastic and eye opening production, isn’t able to include everything that needs to be said.  What is is is a start for anyone who is interested in their health, health issues and what we are doing to contribute to our own problems.

With a step into politics here that will not be discussed in comments, the very same folks who make us sick, do not control the system but contribute to our populations ills, and accept dollars from the companies to keep us medicated are the ones now “fixing” the system from the back end.  The solutions to the majority of ills in this country are not found in  figurative band-aids (medications and insurance controls) applied after the fact but in fixing our food supply system at the front end.  Quality beats quantity over and over and over.  Less more expensive food is better than more cheap food.  Always.

If you haven’t seen Food, Inc you should.  Rent it, buy it, borrow it.  Yes, we made the kids watch it with us.  It’s that important.

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