Where can I buy meat that is made from animals that are treated well?!
http://www.realmilk.com/where.html
These sites can help you with other stuff related to organic and grass fed animals and milk givers. What state are you in? If you're in Texas, I can help you. CA has some good sources too, so where are you???
Grass fed beef most often assures you of humanely treated animals because they are most often raised on small to medium family farms because big time beef producers don't want to hassle with it. They may or may not be certified organic, and just because something says "organic" doesn't make it worth your dime. Case in point is the organic meats at health food stores that come from cattle that could receive as little as 5 minutes each day to be called "free range" and may receive organic grain that's inferior to natural grass feeding. Research, research and research. Kosher is usually a good way to go too. "Good job" to your first answerer. Visit the farm if possible and ask lots of questions... Poultry, beef and eggs should be listed as "pastured" not just "organic".
Your best bet? Go with a co-op that delivers to your local farmers market so you can really talk to the farmer. They have awesome prices and you get top-notch service and they will go out of their way often for you for a special request. I request for our beef not to be aged, just personal preference.
Answers: http://www.organicconsumers.org/madcow/g...
http://www.realmilk.com/where.html
These sites can help you with other stuff related to organic and grass fed animals and milk givers. What state are you in? If you're in Texas, I can help you. CA has some good sources too, so where are you???
Grass fed beef most often assures you of humanely treated animals because they are most often raised on small to medium family farms because big time beef producers don't want to hassle with it. They may or may not be certified organic, and just because something says "organic" doesn't make it worth your dime. Case in point is the organic meats at health food stores that come from cattle that could receive as little as 5 minutes each day to be called "free range" and may receive organic grain that's inferior to natural grass feeding. Research, research and research. Kosher is usually a good way to go too. "Good job" to your first answerer. Visit the farm if possible and ask lots of questions... Poultry, beef and eggs should be listed as "pastured" not just "organic".
Your best bet? Go with a co-op that delivers to your local farmers market so you can really talk to the farmer. They have awesome prices and you get top-notch service and they will go out of their way often for you for a special request. I request for our beef not to be aged, just personal preference.
Kosher meat
start a farm
Yeah, treated well right up until the point they were slaughtered. What a ridiculous question. If you are so concerned then perhaps you need to become a vegetarian?
Health Food stores?
Organic meat is generally good if you have a conscious.
Go to Whole Foods
Their meat is from farms that have higher standards thus the animals are treated better.
While personally I agree that a Kosher butcher would be good for me, especially when considering how much healthier the animals are if they are following Kashrut, I find that some goyim think the traditional blood draining technique is cruel.
a private butcher who raises his own herds on his own farm. i hope your good at making new friends
I don't know where you live, but i buy it from my local food co-op or natural foods grocery store. usually if it says organic and/or kosher, there are rules about how the animals are raised, fed and slaughtered.
buy a hamster from PETCO.
You are joking, right? RIGHT?
I'll tell ya what to do to make absolutely certain it is well treated. You go out to a nice Amish farm in Lancaster County, Pennsylvania and buy a nice little pig, lamb or newborn calf, take it home, feed it the best grains from your own fields which you will grow especially for it, give it loads of natural spring water, buy it a collar and leash so you can walk it in nice green pastures, name it "Punkin" "Muffy" or "Bam Bam," make a quilt for it so it never gets chilly, play with it and give it all the attention a cute little piece of livestock can get, brush and comb it after you bathe it in "Bath & Body Works Orange & Ginger" shampoo, clean off it's cute little feet before you bring it in for the night, read it a bedtime story, turn on the night-light and in about two years you'll have the tastiest ribs in the land...of course that's after you render a tearful good-bye to the poor little creature you lured to your home, made it a pet, made it feel safe & well treated and proclaimed..."Off with its head!"
i don't know what you classify as being "treated well" but they all get killed right? lolz
i think u should be eating meat at all im sorry but i dont eat meat, how cold people eat it?