Meat Talk   /     Meat Talk 05– Keeping chicks happy

Description

In a press release put out earlier this year from the San Francisco- headquartered Happy Egg Company it stated: “Everyone knows I have a soft spot for animals and want to see all animals treated with the best care,” said [new partner] Ross Mathews. “The Happy Egg Co. girls are like me – they enjoy the sun, socializing, and having a good time just doing what they do naturally. These hens are living the high life on the farm….”But then we’re back to the basic question, how can you tell chickens are happy, let alone eggs? What is the criteria for measuring chicken happiness and how is it proved? People – and I’m talking the ever increasing majority who have never seen a farm – assume chickens are like us or at least like the family dog.The postMeat Talk 05 – Keeping chicks happy appeared first onMeat Packing Journal.

Summary

In a press release put out earlier this year from the San Francisco- headquartered Happy Egg Company it stated: “Everyone knows I have a soft spot for animals and want to see all animals treated with the best care,” said [new partner] Ross Mathews. “The Happy Egg Co. girls are like me – they enjoy […]

Subtitle
In a press release put out earlier this year from the San Francisco- headquartered Happy Egg Company it stated: “Everyone knows I have a soft spot for animals and want to see all animals treated with the best care,” said [new partner] Ross Mathews.
Duration
14:09
Publishing date
2016-12-17 16:23
Link
http://meatpacking.info/2016/12/17/episode-5-keeping-chicks-happy/
Contributors
  Reby Media
author  
Enclosures
http://media.blubrry.com/meattalk/meatpacking.info/wp-content/uploads/2016/12/Meat-Talk-5-Final-.mp3
audio/mpeg

Shownotes

In a press release put out earlier this year from the San Francisco- headquartered Happy Egg Company it stated: “Everyone knows I have a soft spot for animals and want to see all animals treated with the best care,” said [new partner] Ross Mathews. “The Happy Egg Co. girls are like me – they enjoy the sun, socializing, and having a good time just doing what they do naturally. These hens are living the high life on the farm….”

But then we’re back to the basic question, how can you tell chickens are happy, let alone eggs? What is the criteria for measuring chicken happiness and how is it proved? People – and I’m talking the ever increasing majority who have never seen a farm – assume chickens are like us or at least like the family dog.

The post Meat Talk 05 – Keeping chicks happy appeared first on Meat Packing Journal.