By Adam Rabiner
American Meat is a 2013 documentary focusing on pig, poultry, and cattle farming in the United States past, present, and possible future. Hog farmer Chuck Wirtz from West Bend, Iowa is typical of the present-day farmers who prefer the industrialized model for its efficiency and productivity. Whereas earlier in the 20th century swine, like many farm animals, were raised in open barns on larger areas of land, by mid-century they were brought indoors and confined to smaller, temperature-controlled spaces. Now one of Chuck’s pigs will spend their entire lives confined to a ten by eighteen-foot space with twenty-four others.
Like many of the farmers interviewed in this film, farming is the family business, passed down from parents to children. Chuck didn’t go to college but started taking care of the family pigs full-time right out of high school. Whereas when Chuck was a boy, he spent hours upon hours helping his parents by pitching manure while listening to a transistor radio, as an adult he spends a good portion of his day walking through the Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFO) looking for sick pigs, segregating those ill ones from the others, and administering antibiotic shots. The work is less physical than it used to be. As a child he and his family could spend all day caring for five hundred animals. Today with the aid of machines to pump, haul, and spread manure, he can take care of ten thousand in two hours.
Chuck finds that farming brings him closer to God and the wonder of his creations, whether through witnessing the birth of an animal or seeing a crop slowly grow from seed to harvest. His world view is traditional and homocentric. God created his pigs for food to sustain humans.
Standing in stark contrast to this paradigm and representing the future of farming, Joel Salatin, owner of Polyface Farm in Swoope, Virginia believes in letting his animals be their true selves. Unlike many other conventional farmers who debeak their chickens to prevent cannibalistic behavior, Salatin observes natural patterns of animal behavior and uses them to his advantage. His birds are allowed to express their “chickenness.” Nicknamed the “Lunatic Farmer” Joel has invented various innovations such as The Egg Mobile, as well as a composting barn known as The Pigaerator. Cows spend the winter there eating hay and creating manure. Corn is periodically added and becomes buried in the hay-manure mix fermenting over time. In the spring the cows are released into the fields to eat fresh grass and the pigs are brought into the barn where they smell the fermenting corn and dig deep to eat it. This mixes air into the manure-hay mixture which creates compost which is then spread on the fields in the fall and helps to create a new harvest of healthy, nutrient-rich grass for the cows the following spring. And the cycle continues.
Many farmers have already begun to emulate Salatin’s low-tech, non-capital-intensive solutions with their requirements for physical labor which the film holds up as an idealized vision for what the future of farming can look like. Ironically, farmhands pulling Egg Mobiles across pastures closely resembles the way families, children and parents, worked the land side by side, in the past.
Polyface Farm, for all its innovations that sets it apart, shares industrial farming’s emphasis on efficiency. While industrial agriculture achieves it from scale, capital equipment, computers, modern machinery, chemical fertilizers and contemporary medicine, Polyface and its imitators have achieved impressive and similar results from the intelligent use of land and animals rotating across the same acreage.
American Meat concludes that it is possible to transition to a future where the Polyface model is the norm in the United States and not the exception. To realize this vision would require hundreds of millions of acres, but there are currently a billion acres of pasture and crop land in the U.S. Because it is much more labor intensive than current methods, this vision of the future will also require a new generation of young farmers which is beginning to happen. Several other changes would be necessary as well including redirecting subsidies for manure pits, corn and soy production, funding innovations in distribution and production, including farmers’ markets, buying clubs and community supported agriculture (CSAs). More companies would have to source from these smaller, local farms, as Whole Foods and Chipotle have begun to do. Pollyannish or no?
American Meat is a 2013 documentary focusing on pig, poultry, and cattle farming in the United States past, present, and possible future. Hog farmer Chuck Wirtz from West Bend, Iowa is typical of the present-day farmers who prefer the industrialized model for its efficiency and productivity. Whereas earlier in the 20th century swine, like many farm animals, were raised in open barns on larger areas of land, by mid-century they were brought indoors and confined to smaller, temperature-controlled spaces. Now one of Chuck’s pigs will spend their entire lives confined to a ten by eighteen-foot space with twenty-four others.
Like many of the farmers interviewed in this film, farming is the family business, passed down from parents to children. Chuck didn’t go to college but started taking care of the family pigs full-time right out of high school. Whereas when Chuck was a boy, he spent hours upon hours helping his parents by pitching manure while listening to a transistor radio, as an adult he spends a good portion of his day walking through the Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFO) looking for sick pigs, segregating those ill ones from the others, and administering antibiotic shots. The work is less physical than it used to be. As a child he and his family could spend all day caring for five hundred animals. Today with the aid of machines to pump, haul, and spread manure, he can take care of ten thousand in two hours.
Chuck finds that farming brings him closer to God and the wonder of his creations, whether through witnessing the birth of an animal or seeing a crop slowly grow from seed to harvest. His world view is traditional and homocentric. God created his pigs for food to sustain humans.
Standing in stark contrast to this paradigm and representing the future of farming, Joel Salatin, owner of Polyface Farm in Swoope, Virginia believes in letting his animals be their true selves. Unlike many other conventional farmers who debeak their chickens to prevent cannibalistic behavior, Salatin observes natural patterns of animal behavior and uses them to his advantage. His birds are allowed to express their “chickenness.” Nicknamed the “Lunatic Farmer” Joel has invented various innovations such as The Egg Mobile, as well as a composting barn known as The Pigaerator. Cows spend the winter there eating hay and creating manure. Corn is periodically added and becomes buried in the hay-manure mix fermenting over time. In the spring the cows are released into the fields to eat fresh grass and the pigs are brought into the barn where they smell the fermenting corn and dig deep to eat it. This mixes air into the manure-hay mixture which creates compost which is then spread on the fields in the fall and helps to create a new harvest of healthy, nutrient-rich grass for the cows the following spring. And the cycle continues.
Many farmers have already begun to emulate Salatin’s low-tech, non-capital-intensive solutions with their requirements for physical labor which the film holds up as an idealized vision for what the future of farming can look like. Ironically, farmhands pulling Egg Mobiles across pastures closely resembles the way families, children and parents, worked the land side by side, in the past.
Polyface Farm, for all its innovations that sets it apart, shares industrial farming’s emphasis on efficiency. While industrial agriculture achieves it from scale, capital equipment, computers, modern machinery, chemical fertilizers and contemporary medicine, Polyface and its imitators have achieved impressive and similar results from the intelligent use of land and animals rotating across the same acreage.
American Meat concludes that it is possible to transition to a future where the Polyface model is the norm in the United States and not the exception. To realize this vision would require hundreds of millions of acres, but there are currently a billion acres of pasture and crop land in the U.S. Because it is much more labor intensive than current methods, this vision of the future will also require a new generation of young farmers which is beginning to happen. Several other changes would be necessary as well including redirecting subsidies for manure pits, corn and soy production, funding innovations in distribution and production, including farmers’ markets, buying clubs and community supported agriculture (CSAs). More companies would have to source from these smaller, local farms, as Whole Foods and Chipotle have begun to do. Pollyannish or no?