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Veggie Thread v2.0 ...all stuff regarding food production
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RE: Veggie Thread v2.0 ...all stuff regarding food production
Farming Fish
Broadcast: 15/02/2014 8:38:13 PM
Reporter: Sean Murphy

Quote:PIP COURTNEY, PRESENTER: Australians aren't eating enough fish. As a nation, we consume about 40 per cent less seafood than recommended for a healthy diet.

The reasons for this are partly due to cost, but also perhaps a reluctance to eat farmed fish from Asia.

Seafood importers have now launched a campaign to correct what they believe are misconceptions about Asian aquaculture.




SEAN MURPHY: The Department of Agriculture says better than 99 per cent of imports are deemed safe. Seafood importers say the public should have faith in their products because they're tested more than Australian seafood.

http://blogs.abc.net.au/theoverflow/2013....html#more

Yum! For our Iberian Cuzzies
Cooking with mussels

Quote:Recipes courtesy of Chaxiraxi Afonso Higuera

Talking out loud about how I would track down a chef to prepare and talk about mussels on camera, Spring Bay Seafood boss Phil Lamb said, "Oh there's a Spanish chef up the road who uses our mussels, and the Spanish know how to cook mussels better than anyone, maybe she's worth a call?"

Chaxiraxi Afonso Higuera proved up for it.

Chaxi (pronounced Sharsi) cooked a range of Spanish dishes showing mussels can be hearty or summery, part of a dish or a star on their own.

Spill the Beans
Broadcast: 2/02/2014 11:43:01 PM
Reporter: Kerry Staight

http://www.abc.net.au/landline/content/2...936358.htm

Traqnscript
Quote:PIP COURTNEY, PRESENTER: They may be the butt of many jokes, but baked beans have been a staple in people's pantries for generations. However, while the market has remained steady, the local industry that produces the classic toast topping has faced many challenges since it was established during World War II. But, as Kerry Staight reports, with the owner of SPC Ardmona, the country's only baked bean cannery, threatening to shut down its Australian operations, this year could deliver one challenge too many.

KERRY STAIGHT, REPORTER: The tropical Burdekin region in North Queensland is classic cane country. But it's not the lush, elegant-looking crop Barry Breadsell has his sights on today. Instead, he's heading for the less attractive shrivelled-up patch of navy beans tucked in between.





A Dry Debate
Broadcast: 8/02/2014 2:46:11 PM
Reporter: Pip Courtney

Transcript
Quote:PIP COURTNEY, PRESENTER: This story is about the crippling drought over most of Western Queensland and parts of New South Wales. As farmers become increasingly desperate, the Federal Government is under pressure to deliver billions of dollars in drought assistance. But the Government is also keen to rein in what it sees as unsustainable welfare, with the Treasurer declaring the age of entitlement is over.

In the middle of this debate about drought and dependency is Agriculture Minister Barnaby Joyce, who hit the road to see and hear for himself what's going on.

Historically low rainfall and searing summer temperatures have hit Queensland farmers fast and hard. The drought is now so bad, a staggering 69 per cent of the state is drought declared.

JOHN MCVEIGH, QLD AGRICULTURE MINISTER: You know, this is almost a perfect storm, this particular drought. It's gripped Queensland fairly quickly, particularly hot in the recent weeks; you know, the heatwaves that have been around the country have sort of landed on top of the developing drought. Severe water - surface water shortages, which is a bit different to previous droughts where we did at least see occasional rainfall. So this is particularly, I think, unique, this drought. Of course here we are looking down the barrel of a second failed wet season.

PIP COURTNEY: Sheep and cattle producers in the north and central-west were affected first, and when crucial summer rains failed to arrive, cotton growers in southern inland Queensland were hit too.

BEN SUTTER, QLD COTTON: During this summer there's been basically no rainfall event, no in-crop rain. So, normally the cotton growers bank on getting one or two rainfall events that will help the crop along, but there's just been nothing since - basically nothing.

PIP COURTNEY: A month out from harvest and the cotton around Dirranbandi and St George is suffering as growers run out of water. Ben Sutter says more than a third of the crop might not make it.

BEN SUTTER: As every day goes by at the moment, there's crops running out of water and there's cotton fields that won't get through to maturity and stuff that has been already ploughed in.

PIP COURTNEY: Hamish McIntyre planted 1,300 hectares of cotton, but has had to turn the taps off to 150 hectares as he's run out of water.

HAMISH MCINTYRE, ST GEORGE COTTON GROWER: We had budgeted on growing approximately 20,000 bales of cotton, our family, a year, and this year, I'll be very happy if we grow sort of 12,000 to 13,000.

DONNA STEWART, BALONNE SHIRE MAYOR: Normally this time of the year there'd be ski boats going up and down and people really enjoying themselves, canoes and kids jumping off the trees into the river and just generally enjoying water sports.

PIP COURTNEY: Farmers aren't the only ones running out of water; so has the Balonne River. Mayor Donna Stewart's never seen it this low.

And this is the town water supply as well?

DONNA STEWART: This is the town water supply. Yeah, this is what we pump out of it.

PIP COURTNEY: Looks pretty prim.

DONNA STEWART: Yeah, it doesn't look too good, does it?

PIP COURTNEY: Donna Stewart's been surprised by the speed and severity of this drought, now hitting a region that was fighting floods just two years ago. She's hearing more stories of desperation than ever before.




A Sheep Called Alice
Broadcast: 24/11/2013 12:57:24 PM
Reporter: Pip Courtney

Very interesting discoveries by a Tasmanian wool grower

Transcript

PIP COURTNEY: Nan started managing her land differently and then a sick sheep called Alice turned her approach to farming on its head.

Unable to stand, Alice was in a sling. Nan became her grazing assistant and would take her out to a paddock near the house to feed. Fortuitously it had a lot of weeds.

NAN BRAY: I started watching and she was eating in the same order, so there was chicory, plantain - which is another exotic plant that works for intestinal parasites - lucerne, clover and a couple of kinds of grass. Chicory, plantain, lucerne, clover, get to the grass she'd look up at me, 'Can we move now?' And then dawned on me she was very specific about which plant. I thought, 'Oh, OK.' So, I mean I basically just watched that and went, 'Well, there's something here. I don't know what it is.'

PIP COURTNEY: Nan realised Alice's eating pattern tied in with ground-breaking work done in the US by Professor Fred Provenza about the link between plant and animal behaviour.

NAN BRAY: The animals are trying to balance their diets and the plants are trying to not be eaten to death. And so what the plants have developed in their ecological system is a whole set of - a range of defences, most of which are chemical. Some of them are mechanical like spines and things, but mostly they're chemical compounds that the plant manufactures, that when an animal eats too much of it, it makes them nauseous. So then they stop eating that plant and move to another plant. So that the plant that was being grazed goes, 'Oh, phew, thank you,' and gets a chance to regenerate.

I learnt from Alice that sheep are incredibly specific about what they eat. They know what they want to eat, that a diversity is really important to them, that grass is the last choice in the forage list. I always just thought she ate grass, you know - what do you think.

And then from Fred's research, what I learned was why. Why are those broad-leaf plants so important in, for sheep nutrition - nutrition generally. And then that allowed me to start changing some other things.

PIP COURTNEY: Nan stopped fighting weeds. Alice taught her they're a medicine chest that sheep will use when they need - what Fred Provenza calls nutritional wisdom.

(Talking to Nan in a paddock) You've just bought the mob through into this laneway area and they've immediately put their heads down and they're absolutely going for it. What are they eating?

NAN BRAY: I reckon they're eating a bit of chicory. This is chicory. It's an exotic plant and it has properties that help the sheep deal with worm burden and they love it.

DAVY CARNES: We have not drenched a sheep for years and years. When they look as if they're not right, they tell you more or less - once you know them - we put them in what we call the chicory patches. They eat the chicory and they get right, no worm. And that's a big expense.

PIP COURTNEY: This dam paddock is the farm's pharmacy but how do the sheep know what to eat and when? Well, Nan says farmers have to help them learn.

Now there's no forced weaning. Nan lets the lambs wean themselves and then stay with their mothers who then teach their young what to eat.

(Davy and Nan talking)

DAVY CARNES: That means bringing the rams in first.

NAN BRAY: We've got to bring the rams in first.

PIP COURTNEY: Davy said the pair have had a few arguments as new management practices, which challenge everything he's seen and done, are introduced. But he's now a convert.

DAVY CARNES: She's got some very radical ideas, I might say, but they are all to me, they're sensible ideas, they can work.

PIP COURTNEY: Nan's sheep aren't divided into age groups. They live in multi-generational flocks. Again, not what Davy was used to.

DAVY CARNES: I like it. It's as simple as that, I just like it.

PIP COURTNEY: Why?

DAVY CARNES: I think the animals themselves get more contented, they are more contented doing that sort of thing, yeah.

PIP COURTNEY: Do you think that a mother and its baby - even two years after she might have had that lamb, do they know each other?

DAVY CARNES: Oh yeah, oh, yes, my word they do. Oh, yes, they know their family groups, mind you, they do. Oh, yes, yes.

PIP COURTNEY: Nan says allowing a family social structure to exist has transformed flock behaviour. She's seen a family group surround and protect a sick ewe from crows.

NAN BRAY: It's like there's this strength of the social fabric that supports all of the animals in the flock. They don't run away, you go into a paddock, even with strangers about, the sheep may move away, but they invariably will turn and look at you and go, 'Well, would you like to state your business because you're on our territory.'

So it's not the kind of stuff that you're used to associating with sheep.

PIP COURTNEY: But perhaps the biggest change at Lemon Hill was Nan's decision to keep the tails on her sheep. She says it's an animal welfare issue. She says lambs with tails grow faster and weigh more and because of their varied diet don't get daggy and at risk of flystrike.

"The Universe is run by the complex interweaving of three elements: energy, matter, and enlightened self-interest." G'Kar-B5
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RE: Veggie Thread v2.0 ...all stuff regarding food production - by KichigaiNeko - February 21, 2014 at 11:50 pm

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