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| I don't know about specific research, but antibiotics generally only stay in the body for a few days, so there shouldn't be any problem there. Can't speak for any other chemicals they might have been fed - but I would think that most commercial egg-laying hens get a similar feed regime, regardless of whether they are in cages, barns or "free range" (which often only means they have free access to a rather crowded outdoor run). Rescued battery hens probably get a healthier diet than any of them! Hope this helps
__________________ Small Plot? No Problem! - my blog about growing organic veg |
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| Do the battery hen farmers give antibiotics? I've never really thought about that before. All I know is that the eggs my girls give me are the best I've ever tasted with the yolks a deep golden colour all free form artificial additives
__________________ Always look on the bright side of life ![]() View my blog - http://chooksandveggies.blogspot.com/ updated November 1st 2008 |
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| Not antibiotics I know but...........I've been doing a bit of research of my own and have found out that organic layers pellets as opposed to ordinary layers pellets are about twice as expensive. I had toyed with feeding my chooks organic layers pellets until I found out that there is a cop out clause which allows the supplier to substitute inorganic material at will!This is a statement from an organic feed supplier! "If it’s labelled organic, is it 100% organic? Not quite. With manufactured feed, there may be instances where it is impossible to obtain certain organic ingredients - often protein or oil sources such as soya, linseed or maize, or vitamin and mineral sources such as yeast, limestone flour or salt - in sufficient quantities. To accommodate this, the regulations permit manufacturers to include a small proportion of non-organic ingredients, and still label the product organic." I'll leave you to draw your own conclusions!
__________________ My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE) |
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| A while ago one of my (ex batt) chickens had to have antibiotics for a cold, the vet suggested we did not consume the eggs for 14 days to allow the drugs to clear her system. So I imagine ex batts should be free of drugs once they are 2 weeks out. Incidentially the antibiotics would not do us any harm but a low level build up in human can lead to resistance by pathogens. I don't thing ex batt eggs would be any different to any other chicken eggs kept in the same conditions, but if you buy them it would make it financially viable for them to be kept by your organic shop. |
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| If a battery egg farmer is caught selling eggs from hens which have recently been given anti-biotics (14 days is the usual 'withdrawal' period) he is in SERIOUS trouble. As said above, the problem is that 'traces' of antibiotic in our food are a cause of bacteria which antibiotics cannot kill.
__________________ Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white. |
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| I can't see how the eggs can be labelled organic if the hens are ex-battery. I thought that land and livestock had to be organic for about 2 years before the soil association would allow you to sell as such. I thought you could only buy day old birds if you wanted organic layers and had to rear them on from there. I may be wrong, but just what I have been led to believe.
__________________ www.poultryproducts.co.uk |
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| I certainly hope ex-bat eggs are safe because they the only fresh eggs I eat. I don't buy eggs from shops while my girls are laying. On the occasions I have had to give them anti-b's from the vet he has told me not to use the eggs for 7 days on the first one (Baytril), and 10 (Tylan) for the next. I suppose it depends on the medication I suppose.
__________________ I'd rather sit on a pumpkin and have it all to myself than be crowded on a velvet cushion. http://hollandsroadparadise.blogspot.com updated 14 May 2008 www.bradleyroundtwo.blogspot.com Last edited by kirsty b; 19-08-2008 at 12:08 AM. |
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| Quote:
Apparently because they are kept in such close proximity they are given antibiotics in their water JUST IN CASE an outbreak of disease occurs! Not sure, but I think that some growth inducing chemicals/antibiotics are added to broiler chickens feed as wel!
__________________ My Majesty made for him a garden anew in order to present to him vegetables and all beautiful flowers.- Offerings of Thutmose III to Amon-Ra (1500 BCE) |
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| I think it is broilers which get 'precautionary' antibiotics (but chickens not being the area where I have encountered anti-b most often this may be a misunderstanding). The additives in other species (especially pigs, and to some extent turkeys) are given to the growing meat-animals, and withdrawn for the last week or two before slaughter, to avoid any residue in the meat. Cows are sometimes given anti-biotics for various reasons, and milk cannot be used until the appropriate time after the last treatment (yes it depends which product was used, some last a ridiculous length of time)
__________________ Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white. |
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| I am pleased to see that I am not the only one to question this! I've read so much in a few days about "factory farming" I am really disgusted and so sad, so much cruelty... In one hand there is the condition in which the animals live, the great pains inflicted upon them, and then on the other hand all the additives, chemicals ( very long list of those! ) that they are fed... which of course we ending up by eating ! why ? what are we achieving by this ? the argument is that there is a strong demand for cheap meat, all this fried chickens, Mc Donalds, and all the rubbish processed food served even in school cantines, stock cubes, baby food.....ahhhrrgghhh !!! ![]() ![]() (Education-education-education) My question is just revealing how little we know about what we eat, it is so difficult to have an access of info about what those battery chicks are fed, and when you found it, you quickly realized that no serious studies are made to assess the risks on the long term for the consumers. Quote:
Substances used in Animal Feed on the Maximum Residue Limits for Clinacox 0.5 % (diclazuril) for turkeys for fattening, chickens for fattening and chickens reared for laying " That is just about a medication that is already given, but the toxicity as yet to be assessed by this comitee of scientists....meanwhile...it is consumed ! (profits-profits-profits) Anyway guys, saving hens is at least something that powerless people can do ! I am sure somehow those poor chicks might have accumulated toxins from their previous life, but with all the rubbish we are fed ourselves...! we might be even more toxic! |
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| If you've ever used the painkiller diclofenac, they you are highly toxic to the vultures which USED to be common in Asia (especially Pakistan). This anti-inflmatory was also given to cattle out there, and the vultures are the main means of disposal of casualty livestock (one of the religions out there also relies on vultures for funerals, the bodies are put on high towers to be accessible to the birds). This drug has been established as the cause of the population of these birds now being less than 10% of what it was before the drug became widely available after it 'went generic'. One knock-on effect of this is a doubling of the cases of rabies in those areas, because with too few vultures to tidy up, the population of feral dogs has rocketted. Anthrax is also more likely to occur, since vultures are the only creatures which can clear-up an infected carcase and NOT redistribute the infection around the area. Vultures are not pretty, but the knock-on effects of their loss could well be disastrous for the areas where they ought to be. Science has a bad habit of not realising what it is doing until things go badly wrong.
__________________ Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white. |
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| Quote:
Re the organic eggs, the shop may be "organic" but as long as they sell the eggs as "ex-battery" and not "organic" they are in the clear. IIRC, the reason organic chicken meat is so expensive is that the regulations have been tightened and they have to have hatched from eggs laid by a chicken that was itself organically-reared. Which came first - the organic chicken or the organic egg?
__________________ Small Plot? No Problem! - my blog about growing organic veg |
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| Quote:
I sometimes think the extremes of the organic approach need an official 'middle ground'. What happened to 'conservation grade'?
__________________ Flowers come in too many colours to see the world in black-and-white. |
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I had toyed with feeding my chooks organic layers pellets until I found out that there is a cop out clause which allows the supplier to substitute inorganic material at will!

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