Caution:
If you have a weak stomach, skip this article!
IT'S
IN THE BAG
Obviously there are millions and millions
of pounds of pet food sold in bags and cans every year. Did you
ever wonder where they get their "meat" and "fat"
from? Do you really think they have their own ranches or farms to
raise their own raw material? Of course not! They look to the many
rendering plants across the nation to provide them with the tonnage
they require on a regular basis.
In the previous article, we did mention
the quantity of pets shipped to rendering factories to be recycled
and used in pet food. However, I left to your imagination to visualize
what goes on in a rendering facility. Let me provide you with a
few details to assist the imagery!
Firstly, let me say that I am glad
that these facilities do exist. Without them our cities would run
the risk of becoming filled with diseased and rotting carcasses.
It is a dirty job that someone has to do. Before World War II, most
slaughter houses looked after their own rendering. After the war,
the rendering of slaughter waste became a separate specialty. Consequently
the rendering plants were no longer subject to most of the federal
inspection regulations associated with meat processing. Thus today,
we find that the industry is largely self regulated and out of the
"public eye".
To even begin to understand this industry
we must first look at the "raw material" as it is received
at the plant. The slaughterhouse for animal carcasses is one of
the main suppliers of material to the rendering industry. To prevent
condemned meat from being rerouted and used for human consumption,
government regulations require that the meat be "denatured"
before being sent to the rendering plants. Nice word, but what does
that mean?
Basically it means that first it must
be contaminated in some way that would make it virtually unusable
for human consumption. Some of the materials used to accomplish
this task are: carbolic acid, creosote, fuel oil, kerosene, citronella,
etc. Once this stuff has literally soaked into the meat, it's then
fit to be sent on to the rendering plant.
Another prime source of raw material
is the veterinary community. Not only are dogs and cats received
in nice little green plastic bags, but also raccoons, possums, deer,
foxes, snakes, etc., etc.
Of course we can't forget the grocery
industry, that must somehow get rid of the spoiled meat cuts that
are no longer saleable and the fat, bones, etc. that we (at home)
would consider garbage.
So inside the rendering plants we find the floor piled high with
"raw product" consisting of a mixture of whole bodies
and animal parts, plastic bags, Styrofoam packages, metal tags,
pet collars-anything and everything that is considered to be "waste"-but
suitable for recycling.
"Rendering" is the process
of cooking raw animal material to remove the moisture and fat. Let's
take a closer look at how this is actually done.
Inside the plant we find masked men
(because of the stench of rotting carcasses) operating mini-bulldozers,
loading the "raw" material into a 10-foot deep stainless
steel pit. At the bottom of the pit, a giant auger-grinder begins
to turn. This converts the mass material into smaller, more manageable
chunks. From there it is transported to another auger for fine shredding.
Now you have to realize that this is
a business and like any other business, they have to cut costs wherever
possible. Consequently, they do not bother to take the time to remove
the flea collars from pets, the pesticide ear tags from cattle,
the plastic bags, Styrofoam packaging, etc, etc. All is grist for
the grinder. Just push it in with the bulldozer.
This mass of goop is then cooked at
280 degrees for one hour. During the cooking process the goop produces
a layer of yellow grease or tallow that rises to the top and is
skimmed off. The cooked meat and bone (along with whatever metal,
pesticides, etc.) are sent to a hammermill press, which squeezes
out the remaining moisture and pulverizes the product into a gritty
powder. Once the batch is finished, all that is left is yellow grease,
"meat" and bone meal. This continuous batch cooking process
goes on non-stop, 24 hours a day, seven days a week, grinding out
ton after ton of saleable product.
Depending on the dominant ingredient
of a particular run, the product now becomes: beef, chicken, lamb,
meat meal, meat by products, poultry meal, fish meal, fish oil,
yellow grease, tallow, beef fat, chicken fat, etc.
Never is it labeled dog meal, cat meal,
skunk meal, rat meal, or any of the other "goodies" that
get mixed in with the everyday batches of "raw material".
Although this processing effectively
kills off any beneficial enzymes, it does not get rid of the sodium
Phenobarbital in the carcasses of euthanized animals. The potential
of other chemical contaminants to be degraded by the rendering process
is also highly questionable. Perhaps instead of calling them rendering
plants it would be more appropriate to call them "toxic waste"
recycling plants.
Need we say who are some of the biggest
customers of the finished product? You got it - the pet food companies.
The primary source of meat and fat in commercial pet food is from
this endless process of rendering plants.
The scary part is that millions of
tons of this "food enhancer" is also trucked to poultry
ranches, cattle feed lots, dairy and hog farms, fish feed plants,
etc. where is it mixed with other ingredients to feed animals and
fish that humans will eat.
By the time the pet food boys get through
adding their own "enhancers" (i.e. preservatives, food
dye, synthetic vitamins) who really knows what's in the bag?
One of the most common problems I hear
about is food allergies. Breeders switch from one brand to another,
from beef to lamb, from grain to rice, etc. and find themselves
frustrated at not being able to solve the problem. Things may seem
to go well for a time and then the same old thing happens all over
again.
Changing to lamb from beef would appear
to be a logical thing to try, but how on earth do you really know
just what you are really getting? Let me give you a hypothetical
example of what could be in a run of "lamb" from the rendering
plant and still legally be labeled as lamb.
If we were to bulldoze into the pit,
say 25% of lamb parts, mix with 20% beef, 20% chicken, say 15% dogs
or cats, and say a mixture of 20% of various road kill animal carcasses,
we can say that the dominant ingredient of this run is lamb. (For
this example we will ignore the % of plastic, metal, Styrofoam,
insecticide, etc. - all too small to affect the labeling process).
As long as the rendering plant does
not misrepresent the % of protein or fat or calcium, etc, they are
legitimately entitled to sell the run to your favorite pet food
manufacturer as "lamb".
By the way, I should mention that the
fat sold by the rendering industry does not all come from animals.
Thanks to the proliferation of fast food restaurants, nearly half
of the "raw material" is waste kitchen grease and frying
oil cleaned out of the traps on a regular basis (another industry
all of its own). Again, the pet food people rely on this source
for the fat that is usually sprayed on the kibble at the end of
the drying process.
Once you understand just what really
goes into producing a commercial pet food, you can't really be surprised
to learn that many of the health problems we see in our companion
animals are directly attributable to a lack of proper nutrition.
When someone asks me "aren't you
afraid of salmonella or contamination in the raw meat you use?",
I only wish I could take them to a rendering facility and show them
just how bad the commercial goop can be! Never again would they
buy a bag or can of pet food without realizing just what they are
really doing. Never again would they have any fear of using "fresh"
meat in place of what the industry laughingly calls food for pets.
For any of you that have not yet switched
to a raw diet, I would urge you to go back and read Volume 1 Issue
2 in conjunction with this article. By doing this you should have
enough basic information to make a fundamental decision on the type
of diet you choose to use for your animals.
Let me repeat what I say in this article.
As we move into the 21st century maybe it's time we turned the clock
back a hundred years and get back to some basic nutrition.
Author: Marina Zacharias
P.O. Box 1436 Jacksonville, OR 97530
http://www.naturalrearing.com
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