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Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary Saves Homeless Animals From Failed Backyard Farms

Posted: 03/ 6/2012 4:11 pm

From Mother Nature Network's Laura Moss:

The Woodstock Farm Animal Sanctuary gets weekly calls from people looking for new homes for their roosters, goats and other animals. Founded in 2004 with just a few chickens and a rooster, today the 23-acre refuge in Woodstock, N.Y., is home to more than 200 animals. While most of them are the result of investigations into farms and slaughterhouses, “a surprising number” are rescued “from the streets of New York City,” according to the sanctuary’s website.

“We get calls all the time from people who don’t want their animals or can’t afford them. We get emails about roosters found in the city or goats being neglected or pigs that are going to be killed if we don’t take them,” says Elana Kirshenbaum, programs coordinator at Woodstock.

As the local food movement takes hold and urban homesteading gains popularity, more people are giving backyard farming a try. The prospect of fresh eggs and milk inspires them to bring home adorable chicks and goats -- but when chicks grow into roosters or goats begin eating the landscaping, these animals are often given to animal sanctuaries or simply abandoned.

“People have a romantic view of farming, but it takes a lot of time, energy and money to care for animals. Here, we take our chickens to the vet, and when they’re sick, we give them antibiotics. People need to ask themselves if they’re ready to take on that kind of responsibility for the life of the animal,” says Kirshenbaum.

The popularity of raising chickens is one of the greatest challenges for farm animal sanctuaries. Hatcheries are only 90 percent accurate when sexing newborn chicks, according to Woodstock, so when urban agrarians bring them home, there’s a chance they’ll end up with a rooster or two.

Roosters are prohibited under most city ordinances, so owners release them or try to find them new homes. Kirshenbaum says Woodstock currently has 50 roosters, but not all states have a sanctuary capable of caring for the birds. Most municipal animal shelters can’t house roosters, so the birds are often euthanized.

“No one wants roosters. People want to keep hens and take their eggs, but when you buy chicks, you’re often supporting violence because the male chicks are killed immediately,” Kirshenbaum says.

But chickens aren’t the only problem. Farm animal rescues say they’re also seeing an increase in the number of homeless goats. Cities like San Francisco, Portland, Ore., and Charlottesville, Va., allow residents to keep goats within city limits, and other municipalities, including Minneapolis and Northhampton, Mass., are attempting to overturn goat bans.

What many new urban farmers don’t realize is that female goats need to be bred regularly to produce milk, which makes the fate of male goats, which are unable to produce milk, a particular concern for farm animal rescues.

Debra White, president and founder of Winslow Farm in Norton, Mass., says the breeding and slaughtering of goats is becoming a problem in the city of Boston, which is located 45 minutes from her animal sanctuary.

“Goats are becoming more and more vulnerable to the hands of certain ethnic groups who will take them and breed them only to be slaughtered in someone's backyard for a quick $60. I get calls from neighbors who tell me there are sheep kept in dog crates in the sun with no food or water and goats tied tightly to fences unable to lay down until someone buys them to slaughter them,” she says.

Most cities’ animal shelters aren’t designed to house livestock, and while there are farm animal sanctuaries, many states don’t have one. Kirshenbaum estimates there are fewer than 15 well-funded ones in the United States.

“There are so few farm animal sanctuaries and they only have so much space. We’re rescuing animals that don’t even exist in the wild anymore, but there’s no federal government or state government funding to protect them,” she says.

If you’re considering raising animals in your yard, Kirshenbaum recommends visiting a farm animal sanctuary first and learning about the animals and their plight. Woodstock offers tours April through October. If you decide to bring home goats, chickens, geese or any other animals, first make sure city ordinances allow them. Then check with local animal shelters or sanctuaries about adopting animals instead of supporting breeders.

“Get them in pairs as these are herd animals,” White advises. “Talk to your local farm and feed stores to feed them a proper diet. Vet bills can get expensive if something goes wrong, so have a little nest egg set aside for medical bills.”

But Kirshenbaum cautions people against raising farm animals and suggests that those interested in producing their own food stick with gardening.

“If you want to get involved in backyard farming, have an organic vegetable garden. I know a lot of environmentalists are all about sustainable farming, but you can’t sustainably raise an animal in captivity.”

If you know of a farm animal that needs a home, visit farmanimalshelters.org to find the sanctuary nearest you.

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Filed by Jessica Leader  | 
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
RoughCollie
Destination: A new way of seeing things.
08:29 PM on 03/09/2012
Wait a minute, this is a very weird article. We're talking chickens and farm animals..not pet dogs and cats. Last I knew a large majority of people ate chicken (and goats and ducks and ham aka pigs).

Most breeds of chickens are dual-purpose, meaning they lay eggs and are big enough for Sunday dinner. When they stop laying, you drop them off at the butcher who does the dirty deed and even removes all the feathers; when you return it's almost like having gone to the grocery store only you know exactly what kind of feed and care the chicken you are going to consume has had.

What this article screamingly reveals is the complete disconnect between people and the food they eat. Many of our grandparents kept chickens and had a garden, the women did the canning and the men did the slaughtering (with exceptions, of course).

That said, I do get the squeamishness...I am SO guilty!. Even though I have raised chickens for 10 years, I can't eat my own (I give the roosters to other people who have them slaughtered and I keep my favorites as pets and let them grow old)...my grandmother must be rolling her eyes somewhere "up there".
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02:22 PM on 03/07/2012
This place is amazing, truly. If you're in the area, I highly suggest visiting.
10:05 AM on 03/07/2012
Traditionally you eat the unwanted male roosters and goats. Male roosters can be fixed (capons) to make them more palatable. Male goats can be fixed and be used as draft animals. I have not idea why you would raise a pig unless it was to butcher.
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averagezoe
Don't breed or buy while homeless animals die!
08:54 PM on 03/06/2012
And the stupidity continues. No longer satisfied with abusing and neglecting cats and dogs, people now have to add farm animals to the list. What sort of a cretin would even consider keeping farm animals in an urban setting? That alone should be construed as torture.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
karen lyons kalmenson
i poem/paint, sometimes, i ain't
07:49 PM on 03/06/2012
neuter and spay
so no more animals
end up this way
homeless and alone
and scared
so much better
they deserve to fare♥
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
07:43 PM on 03/06/2012
Ms Kirschenbaum while much of the work you do is wonderful, keep the editorializing to yourself. Raising animals for food was done for thousands of years before the discovery of antibiotics and the establishment of veterinary science. It really isn't that hard. Btw do you eat meat?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
olitenup
09:50 PM on 03/06/2012
The animals are being abandoned by the lazy, and disinterested.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
07:18 AM on 03/07/2012
So let's lump those together with the industrious and motivated? She expressed the opinion that nobody should raise livestock on a small scale. Except her of course.
09:49 PM on 03/07/2012
Hello,
Please remember that I didn't write this article and some of my words have been edited and altered. Having said that however, I do not believe there is any ethical justification for breeding, holding captive, and exploiting any living being- regardless of how many thousands of years it has been done. Time and the duration of a behavior does not solidify the morality of it. Our oppression and enslavement of billions of innocent beings across the spectrum of non-human species is completely unjust. I do not eat anything from a living being. I'm vegan. It's not a diet. It's a way of life and a profoundly deep belief in the reverence of all living beings and the earth. May you one day understand the injustice that humanity inflicts upon the innocent in its many ugly, vile, and grotesque forms.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
jhnnxn
Won't say it face to face? Don't post it online!
06:37 AM on 03/08/2012
May you one day understand the true value of human life. As long as you continue to equate it with the life of every other species that simply will not happen. Good luck !