The Cows
Use attributes for filter ! | |
Google books | books.google.com |
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Originally published | June 16, 2016 |
Authors | Dawn O'Porter |
Genres | Domestic Fiction |
Date of Reg. | |
Date of Upd. | |
ID | 1139882 |
About The Cows
*Dawn O'Porter's brand new novel, SO LUCKY, is available to pre-order now! * THE SUNDAY TIMES BESTSELLER, shortlisted for best audiobook in the Specsavers National Book Awards 2018 Fearlessly frank and funny, the debut adult novel from Dawn O'Porter is the book that everybody needs to read right now. . . .
Swiss village of Aarwangen in ding-dong over challenge to cowbells
... Animal rights activists have questioned whether The Cows are harmed by having to wear a heavy noisy bell...
Ukraine dam: Rebuilding shattered lives after Ukraine's dam collapse
... " Maybe we will take out another loan, we will mow some hay for The Cows or buy some more...
George Harrison's Hare Krishna Manor celebrates 50 years
... " But here we find that if we base our lives on The Cows and the milk production and the fruits and vegetables of the Earth, we can have a healthy life and also have time to pursue higher studies...
Escaped cows take bank holiday tour of Marlow
... The Cows escaped early on Monday and made their way to Marlow where people started noticing them shortly before 09:00 BST, as...
The Suffolk manor house where 60 people live together
... Every resident does around 15 hours of work a week in the house or gardens, from cleaning and gardening to milking The Cows and looking after the sheep, pigs, chickens and bees...
Livestock farming polluted rivers 300 times in one year
... " It helps the soil, and it helps the grass, and it helps The Cows to produce the milk that we need to sell, " she said...
A field of cows set me off on a new career path
... " I prefer dairy farming to beef farming because you get a lot more interaction with The Cows, " she says...
British food: How traditional firms are faring under pressure
... " Not only do we have to get a vet certification for The Cows that supply our milk, we also have to clarify whether The Cows have been in the UK for a certain period of time...
Livestock farming polluted rivers 300 times in one year
By Claire Marshall & Malcolm PriorBBC Rural Affairs Team
Livestock farms in England polluted rivers 300 times Last Year , causing 20 major incidents, according to the latest government figures.
Yet only six farms were prosecuted in 2021, with the Environment Agency giving out warning letters instead.
The Dairy Industry - mostly thanks to the waste its millions of cows produce - is the worst environmental offender, linked to half of all farm pollution.
The government said prosecution was a Last Resort for persistent offenders.
The National Farmers Union (NFU) said all farmers took their environmental responsibilities seriously and that they were taking " voluntary action through Industry -led initiatives to drive improvements that benefit the water environment".
Much of the environmental threat to rivers from farming comes from cow waste called slurry - a mix of manure and water that farmers store and spread as fertiliser.
Each of the UK's 2. 6m. That's approximately 50 billion litres of manure a Year - Enough to fill Wembley Stadium More Than 12 times.
The slurry produced has to be stored but it can leak from badly-maintained containers or, if too much is applied to The Land or if it rains heavily, it can run off from fields.
Serious pollution incidents can lead to prosecution.
One offender is Michael Aylesbury, a director of Cross Keys Farms Ltd. In June this Year ,
He had been prosecuted before for polluting the same stretch of the Frome in 2016,
Sue Everett lives close to The River and took footage of The Most
" The First thing was The Smell - it was appalling, " She Said . " As I approached The River , I could see that it was black. The Next morning I went out with my camera and took some videos of the Dead Fish . "
She fears The Public are not aware of The Threat posed by farm slurry to rivers, saying: " I think farm pollution has been Hidden Away for far too long. "
But the government, farmers and The Dairy Industry say they are all Taking Steps to tackle slurry pollution in rivers.
One farmer that is leading The Way is Kate Hoare, based near Saltash in Cornwall.
She not only carefully manages her slurry but has installed one of the UK's first covered slurry lagoons which can capture methane for use to power her tractor.
She describes slurry as " liquid gold" and says every farmer knows the value of keeping it on The Land and out of rivers.
" It helps The Soil , and it helps the grass, and it helps The Cows to produce The Milk that we need to sell, " She Said .
" So, I think it's at the forefront of every dairy farmer's Mind - how they can improve their slurry store and stop it from filling with rainwater and make The Most of that product.
" Because we're all good at recycling, as you know. It's what we do as farmers. "
To ensure best practice, farms are inspected by the Environment Agency . In 2021, 721 inspections were carried out on 693 farms.
More Than half of inspections found farmers were breaking the regulations governing slurry storage.
The freshwater fish conservation group Wildfish is currently suing the government over how it deals with water companies pumping sewage in rivers and seas.
But its chief executive Nick Measham is equally concerned about The Threat posed by dairy farming and the slurry it produces.
He Said : " Increasingly, we see across the country industrial-scale farming units, particularly dairy and beef units. The slurry that they produce has to go somewhere.
" Frequently, farmers actually do view The River as an Open Sewer . This slurry is really potent stuff. I mean, it's much more powerful in terms of its impact On Water than human sewage. "
" They've increased The Number of farming inspectors, but until a couple of years ago, the probability of you as a farmer getting an inspection was about one in 200 years. So clearly, that is not a big incentive to clean your Act Up . "
The Environment Agency said it is working " constructively" with farmers to reduce water pollution and that it had increased The Number of inspections to More Than 3,000 since January this Year .
It added that since April 2021 it has issued at least 140 warning letters and required 6,169 improvement actions on farms, with 2,791 completed.
It said its focus was on " high-risk locations, previously non-compliant businesses, and those farming sectors of greatest concern".
But it admitted only six agricultural prosecutions took place in 2021/22, saying court action was used as " a Last Resort when there is persistent non-compliance".
Defra said it has doubled the funding for its Catchment Sensitive Farming programme, which provides free advice to farmers to help them better manage manure and soils.
And, earlier this month,
The NFU welcomed the funding, saying that farmers had already made a 75% reduction in serious pollution incidents Year -on-Year compared to 2000.
NFU deputy president Tom Bradshaw said: " The NFU will continue to work with Defra and the Environment Agency through their advice-led approach to infringements, in order to effectively communicate the farming rules for water guidance to its members. "
Meanwhile, the UK's largest dairy company, Arla, said it is now paying its farmers to work in more environmentally-friendly ways.
A spokeswoman said: " Our farmer owners are rewarded through their milk price for covering slurry stores, using certain slurry spreading techniques and using slurry to make biogas, a type of Renewable Energy that can be used to generate electricity and power vehicles. "
Source of news: bbc.com