A start?

All eggs from caged hens will be removed from the shelves of Woolworths over five years as the supermarket responds to growing consumer demand to address animal welfare, the supermarket chain will announce on Friday.

 

Battery hens lay half of the eggs sold by Woolworths and will be phased out by 2018, affecting 12 caged egg suppliers that will have to shift to a sustainable cage-free model.

 

The change will mean a rise in egg prices, with caged eggs being the cheapest option, but is expected to be applauded by animal rights groups and ethical consumers.

As part of Woolworths' poultry overhaul, caged eggs will no longer be an ingredient of any home-brand products.

 

The treatment of chickens used for meat will also have to adhere to the minimum standards set by the RSPCA.

 

This includes adequate access to water and food, adequate space and freedom from ''discomfort, pain and distress'', according to the guidelines.

 

Woolworths is not the only chain addressing the treatment of chickens.

 

Coles announced it would stop selling company-branded caged eggs in October last year, accounting for 350,000 hens that were freed from cages.

 

Consumers can now buy ''welfare-friendly'' eggs from the Coles-branded products.

 

The popularity of caged eggs has fallen noticeably in recent years as consumers demand a stronger commitment to animal welfare. In 2009, caged eggs made up 70 per cent of all eggs sold in Woolworths; they now comprise 50 per cent.

 

A report from the CSIRO on poultry standards shows that caged chickens have a limited ability to perch, fully stretch or lay eggs in a nest. Diseases are also difficult to contain in caged environments, the report said.

 

But less than five years ago, consumers would not have known if they were buying free-range, barn-laid or caged eggs.

 

It was only in late 2009 that Woolworths started clearly labelling how their eggs had been farmed, designating free-range, barn-laid and caged eggs.

 

A report by consumer group Choice found the average cost of cage eggs was 43¢ per 100g, while the cost of barn-laid eggs was 80¢ and free-range eggs 93¢. The report, released this week, found free-range eggs cost more than double the price of cage eggs, but the number of chickens varied from the recommended 1500 chickens per hectare to 20,000 per hectare.

Woolworths' Select brand of free-range eggs have 10,000 chickens per hectare.

 

Macro, another of Woolworths' brands, lists a chicken stocking density of 1500 birds per hectare – the recommended standard for free-range.

 

As of last week, the stocking density will now be labelled on all Woolworths Select free-range eggs.

 
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Re: A start?


 

 Brown and white eggs have the same nutritional value.


Yes, but the brown ones look so much healthier LOL  🙂

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Voltaire: “Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities, Can Make You Commit Atrocities” .
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Re: A start?


@***super_nova*** wrote:

@just_me_karen wrote:
I want some chooks too. I wonder if I got them when they're babies if I can train them to be friendly?


Be careful what you wish for 🙂  My last 2 were Rhode Island Red and so friendly they refused to live in their pen and every morning I would find them sitting on my back step.  Had to be careful not to step on them.  The problem was they also pooed on the patio and especially the door step.  They followed me everywhere, really wanted to come in the house, and would sit on my lap given half chance LOL.  If they did not have me they followed the dogs. 

They kept flying out of their pen even when I had a litter of pups, and I spent the day putting them back, but once I was not fast enough and .... well, 8 pups enthusiastically greeting hen was just too much for her. 

Having poultry also attracts rats. 


not taking a shot here, just curious, and also a pretty general question, not specifically aimed at you, it's just you mentioned the rats.

 

What do you do with rats and mice etc? I mean do you kill them, poison them or just let nature take it's course.

 

Rats are animals too, and I reckon they'd have feelings.


Some people can go their whole lives and never really live for a single minute.
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Re: A start?


@the_great_she_elephant wrote:

This is where my eggs come from.

 

http://www.farmweekly.com.au/news/agriculture/agribusiness/general-news/cracking-the-egg-market/2633...


so how does that farmer get her chickens she ele? does she breed them there? and what is done with them once they no longer lay?


Some people can go their whole lives and never really live for a single minute.
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Re: A start?


@crikey*mate wrote:

chicken1.jpg


Ooooooooh, I will never eat an egg again  😞

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Voltaire: “Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities, Can Make You Commit Atrocities” .
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Re: A start?

and in the egg factories to produce chickens, do they artificially inseminate the eggs to make sure that they all have chicks, (looks like all the ones in the drawers up there are fertile) or do some grow chickens and others just get cooked?

 

I'm thinking in the cases up there that the producers would be wanting to make sure as many eggs were fertile s possible. It would waste their resources and reduce their profit margins if they were just taking pot luck on the eggs they were incubating.


Some people can go their whole lives and never really live for a single minute.
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Re: A start?

Yes, super, I think brown eggs look much nicer also. I don't know why anyone would be bothered because they can't get eggs with white shells.

 

Having poultry also attracts rats. 

 


Sure does, they are after the chook food/grain. Lots of rat holes around, under the hen house, on the farm.

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Re: A start?


@crikey*mate wrote:

 

What do you do with rats and mice etc? I mean do you kill them, poison them or just let nature take it's course.

 

Rats are animals too, and I reckon they'd have feelings.


They chewed up through the bins that my chook an dog  food was stored in the shed, so i moved it into my pantry, and they started coming inside our house.  First i tried to trap them, but they are pretty clever not to get caught in those deadly traps.  Then i got trap that catches them alive and got some, but that leaves the problem of disposing of them, so I just got a cat and she sorted them out. 

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Voltaire: “Those Who Can Make You Believe Absurdities, Can Make You Commit Atrocities” .
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Re: A start?

I like the idea of the cat - that's good - it's kind of the natural order thing.

 

(since we're discussing animal welfare)

 

I've got mini fox terriers. Apparently they are supposed to hunt mice etc.

 

Mine are scared of them.

 

I've never had a cat. Well one of my brothers did when I was a kid, but it wasn't mine.


Some people can go their whole lives and never really live for a single minute.
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Re: A start?

My family used to pour petrol down the rat holes (under the hen house, one was movable), light it, wait for them to come out and knock them on the head..

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Re: A start?

I don't really care if rats are trapped/drowned/poisoned... they are vermin.

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