Better Cluck Next Time: ‘Food, Inc.’ chicken farmer has a new, humane farm [View all]
Food, Inc. chicken farmer has a new, humane farm
By Caroline Abels
A version of this post originally appeared on Eat with Care.
Twelve minutes into the 2009 documentary
Food, Inc., Carole Morison appears on the screen haggard, tired, quietly seething. Squinting into the sun, she tells the camera, Ive just made up my mind; Im gonna say what I have to say, and she proceeds to show and tell.
Wearing a face mask, she steps inside one of her chicken houses, where she is raising broilers for Perdue. Inside she reveals a crowded sea of birds bumping into each other and squawking in agitation. Chickens are shown taking a few steps and falling down due to the weight theyve been bred to put on rapidly. Others are on their backs, gasping for breath inside a chicken house they cannot leave. Carole picks up a few dead birds and throws them in a pile.
She walks back outside, removes her face mask, wipes the dust off her face, and says with disgust, Thats normal.
But its far from normal today. Carole Morison is still stepping into her chicken houses in Pocomoke, Md., but now the chickens follow her. Rather than flee, they try to roost on her shoulder. Now she doesnt have to wear a face mask, and shes hopeful that she may be able to take antibiotics again after years of developing allergies while using Perdues antibiotic-laden feed. And in a widely circulated photograph taken for Flavor magazine, she looks 10 years younger than she did in the movie. ..................(more)
The complete piece is at:
http://grist.org/sustainable-farming/food-inc-chicken-farmer-has-a-new-humane-farm/