The Rotary Club of downtown Seattle has more than 600 business members who meet weekly. They recently invited Denis Hayes and Gail Boyer Hayes, co-authors of COWED: The Hidden Impact of 93 Million Cows on America's Health, Economy, Politics, Culture, and Environment, to speak to the group.
Representatives from the Dairy Farmers of Washington and WSDA were present. In the question-and-answer period, third-generation Enumclaw dairy farmer Leann Krainick addressed the authors and the 450+ Rotarians present. She and her husband Mike own a dairy that produces conventional milk and operates as a highly sustainable farm by not only composting dairy cow manure for bedding, but bagging it for sale at retail garden stores.
Krainick told the authors "Our dairy has 1,100 cows. We practice a high degree of sustainability; we get spent grain from breweries that otherwise would be sent to landfills. We take all the manure to compost, for use as cow bedding and soil for garden centers. This takes a whole lot of money."
Gail Boyer answered that "It's terrific to try to be sustainable. It's going to be hard. There is a burgeoning organic dairy farm industry in Washington state. It's much harder with 1,000 cows. You have to make a bottom line. What we're trying to do is make it an honest bottom line."
Krainick then noted that 330,000 pounds of American powdered milk are shipped every day to China and India. "We have the cheapest and also the safest food supply in the world," she said. "If we take your model, what is going to be the economic impact to my farm and my industry? And what are you going to tell those people in China?"
Denis Hayes replied that "A lot of what is sent to China is mixed with water that is in terrible shape," and that "China is moving aggressively toward a high degree of self-sufficiency and the American dairy industry won't be affected as much as the beef industry." Read More..