 |
Alderspring RanchGrass Fed
Beef is:
Grown by us on our high mountain
ranch in Idaho
Grazed on certified organic
and transitional pastures
Fed only pasture and hay;
nothing else, ever
Never given chemicals of
any kind (no antibiotcs, no hormones, no pesticides)
Dry-aged 18-21 days, the
old world way
Hand carved and packaged
|
| Our
website is extensive. You can head right to our store or explore further.
HOME
HEAD
TO STORE
About
Us
Contact
us
About
Alderspring
Grass Fed Beef
FAQs
Cooking
with Caryl
Learn
Why
everyone
is
excited
about
Grass
Fed Beef! |
Pesticides
and Insecticides
Most beef (including much sold under natural
beef labels) have been treated with insecticides to control external and
internal parasites. Most internal parasites are controlled with a
pour-on external treatment (read carefully here- yes, an insecticide applied
to the back of an animal will eliminate or reduce internal parasites).
These pesticides are often artificial estrogens, endocrine interrupters
or organophosphates (similar to “nerve gas”). Mark
Purdey, an organic dairy farmer from England believes organophosphates
trigger “mad cow” disease, and hormone mimics have recently come under
scrutiny as the cause of many modern diseases (See OUR
STOLEN FUTURE.)
While there is a recommended withdrawal
time before sending beef to market, we have never noted any testing, nor
has anyone ever questioned us whether |
 |
|
an animal we’ve sold had been recently treated.
Additionally, over 90% of all hamburger consumed in the U.S. is blended
with imported beef and beef byproducts (Commerce Department figures), and
we are skeptical of the purity of these imported products.
Living healthy lives on grass in our arid
climate, our cows have not had a problem with internal parasites.
We do sometimes use a pyrethroid-based ear tag on the mother cows to reduce
irritation from biting face-flies and a pyrethroid-based fly spray on wounds
to reduce potential for infection spread by insects. We don't tag
young calves. Pyrethroids are synthetic versions of pyrethrins, which
are derived from Chrysanthemum flowers.
We also use NO pesticides or insecticides
on our fields, which were certified organic in early 2005.
Coverup-
Insecticides cause mad cow disease
Eye on Ireland
13 December 2000 (added 2/03)
Pharmaceutical
interests in the UK are ignoring new scientific research that shows the
insecticide used in the UK government's own warble-fly campaigns triggered
the surge of 'Mad Cow' disease.
Latest experiments
by Cambridge University prion specialist, David R. Brown, have shown that
manganese bonds with prions to cause BSE. Other researchers' unpublished
work shows that prions in the bovine spine --along which insecticides are
applied-- can be damaged by ICI's Phosmet organophosphate(OP) insecticide
-causing the disease.....
|