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Ethical Farming Ireland

Analysis The sight of a tiny calf crammed into a trailer on top of a pile of others is sickening

Caroline Rowley of Ethical Farming Ireland says the shocking RTÉ Investigates findings this week showed nothing new when it comes to the welfare of young calves.

THE NATION HAS been horrified by the cruel brutal treatment exposed by RTÉ Investigates on Monday of young calves, mostly males from the dairy sector, at marts and during export to veal farms in mainland Europe. Sadly, I have seen it all before and have been highlighting many of these issues for years.

Working with French group L214 and the Dutch group Eyes on Animals, we have conducted several investigations into the calf export industry, exposing the rough treatment of young vulnerable calves at marts, prolonged periods of time with no feed during transport, abuse at the lairages in Cherbourg, and inhumane conditions at the destination veal farms.

I have seen footage of calves being hit, kicked, dragged by the ears and tail and prodded with the handle of paddles and sticks, I’ve seen them have gates slammed shut on them in an act of temper. But that was in France.

We have fantastic standards in Ireland, claims MEP Billy Kelleher, it’s those other member states that are ruining it for the rest of us. Well, that got blown out of the water by RTÉ Investigates because that exact behaviour towards very young calves is happening at Irish marts.

The sight of a tiny calf being crammed into a trailer, on top of a pile of others was sickening.

I shudder to think where they were going. Because the other exposure that sickened me was the truckloads of days-old calves being sent for slaughter. What kind of a nation are we that condones killing baby animals? What about this: Over 30,000 calves have been slaughtered so far this year, but that is just at the Department of Agriculture, Food and the Marine Approved slaughterhouses for human consumption, we don’t know how many are killed in total because it’s not recorded at other premises. So we actually have no idea how many calves are killed this way. Is this the reputation that we want, as an exporting nation with a lucrative dairy industry? You don’t see those images in the slick dairy product media promotions.

Cruel system

The issue starts with the overproduction of calves. To produce dairy a cow has to produce a calf. Cows that produce good milk don’t produce good beef. It is possible to use sexed semen but we can’t have an ever-expanding dairy sector so that isn’t the answer on its own, but it can be used to produce different breeds of calf that have more value. Or we could just switch to breeds that are dual purpose like the Flekvieh and Red Poll.

Whatever way, there must also be a reduction in the herd.

Over two million calves have been born this year to date. That’s a lot to deal with. That’s why the marts are packed full of 10 – 14 day old calves during calving season in spring. They can be there all day, in crowded pens with no food, sometimes no bedding and no access to water. They are visibly confused, hungry and exhausted, it’s a noisy and stressful environment for a young animal.

Workers can get frustrated and impatient trying to control them, and that’s where the abuse comes in. There is no excuse, but you can see how it happens.

After spending all day at a stressful mart, the calves can either stay there, get moved to an assembly centre or if they are too young for export go to a dealer’s yard. Whether they get fed that evening or not, we don’t know. We do know they are fed at around 10:00 am the next day, before being loaded for export.

Investigations

During our investigation in March, we trailed two trucks from the assembly centre in Fossa, Kerry to Rosslare port. The trucks left at 14:15 for the 21:00 Stena Line ferry that left 50 minutes late that evening. So let’s do some maths.

Before even leaving Ireland the calves have not had any feed for nearly 12 hours. Then they have the 18-hour ferry journey, which took 19 hours because the sea was so rough, and a couple of hours to get to the lairage and unload and we are now at 33 hours with no feed, and as around 2,500 calves arrive at the same time many have to wait hours to be fed.

Again, this is where some workers can get impatient with the desperately hungry calves and treat them violently.

Abuse at the mart, prolonged starvation, abuse at the lairage in Cherbourg, inhumane veal farm, slaughter at six months old. That is the life of an Irish male dairy calf.
What concerns me is what happens next. In 2019 L214 exposed horrific abuse at the lairage in Tollevast, Cherbourg. One worker got prosecuted but the manager and all the other workers who watched were untouched and it was business as usual.

In 2020 L214 uncovered the same appalling treatment at the other lairage in Couville. Same thing, a worker or two got reprimanded and that was it. In 2023 L214 uncovered the abuse at Couville, nothing had changed. I bet we could go to both lairages today and would find the same violent treatment, and I fear it will happen at the marts.

Dairy farmers and farming groups have expressed shock and outrage in recent days following RTÉ Investigates’ work and stated that calf export is integral to the sector but must be done properly. Let’s be clear, there is no way to export calves humanely or in line with legislation because it is not possible to feed calves during transit. That is the simple truth.

The dairy industry must find an alternative outlet for their calves, and keep them with the herd until weaned. If you don’t have the facilities to look after them then don’t breed them in the first place.

Caroline Rowley is an animal welfare campaigner and founder of Ethical Farming Ireland. Her interest in farm animal welfare began when working in a hatchery on a kibbutz in Israel as a student. It wasn’t pleasant. This started years of focus on animal welfare, documenting shipments of cattle loading for Libya and Turkey, and truckloads of calves leaving for France. Caroline Rowley also contributed to Noteworthy’s investigation last year which exposed that unweaned calves were being left without milk for long periods on the journey to Europe. Read the full investigation here. 

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26 Comments
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    Mute Pat Duffy
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    Dec 21st 2013, 8:47 AM

    And don’t be leaving rubbish and empty boxes at the bottle banks ye Muppets

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    Mute lawrence mulgrew
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:12 AM

    Maybe if card board and paper recycling bins were placed beside the bottle banks instead of a usual little tiny bin it wouldn’t be a problem.

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    Mute Pablo
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    Dec 21st 2013, 10:27 AM

    Unsupervised Cardboard compactors at bottle banks would be impractical and people would throw domestic waste into them..

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    Mute margaret
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:07 AM

    Are there still people out there who do NOT recycle?

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    Mute Macca Mock
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:25 AM

    Re-cy-cling? I’m afraid I’m not familiar with that term you adorable little ragamuffin.

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    Mute conventional
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:30 AM

    I live in an apartment block. There is a ‘rubbish’ room in the basement car park. There are large green bins and large black bins, practically side by side. There’s another one for glass. Posters everywhere make it crystal clear what items should go in what bin yet I always see cardboard, plastic bottles, glass etc in the black bin. Everytime. It’s free and it couldn’t be easier yet many of my neighbours just cannot be bothered…..

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    Mute Gaius Gracchus
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    Dec 21st 2013, 12:10 PM

    The exact same in my apartment block, I even sometimes find myself moving plastic and cardboard from the normal bins to the recycling ones, like an absolute eejit. I don’t know if it’s because some of the residents come from countries that don’t have organised recycling facilities, or if people are just being lazy baxtards, maybe I should get a sash and observe my neighbours, but it’s very cold down there this time of year.

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    Mute Kieran Nolan
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    Dec 21st 2013, 12:56 PM

    Lol, love it. Reminds me of Marino church. A few more men in sashes and we’ll get the place sorted in no time.

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    Mute conventional
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    Dec 21st 2013, 1:01 PM

    Haha yes I have also moved the odd piece from black to green. And yes, I too suspect it’s because many of the residents hail from places where recycling isn’t common. Nevertheless, a trained chimp could understand the instructions on the posters that are, again, everywhere in the building so I can only put it down to sheer indifference.

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    Mute conventional
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    Dec 21st 2013, 4:34 PM

    Dublin, yes. Travellers, no. It’s not dirty, messy, ‘this is why everyone hates us’ littering. The bins are being used. Just not correctly.

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    Mute John Doee
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    Dec 21st 2013, 8:40 AM

    I put my empty bottles in the black bin . If I have to pay to have them collected, bottlbanks and recycling are a non runner, not wasting time, effort, petrol so government can meet recycling targets and look good in europe.

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    Mute Shane O'Connell
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    Dec 21st 2013, 8:46 AM

    Ignorant, lazy, self-serving pig. What an attitude to be proud of, “it’s someone else’s problem.”

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    Mute Macca Mock
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    Dec 21st 2013, 8:55 AM

    I feck them into the river

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    Mute lawrence mulgrew
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:10 AM

    Johns right. There’s no incentive to promote recycling in this country. It costs the consumer more to be green. The likes of Germany pay 10cent a bottle. And you bring it back to the supermarket. This country is a joke when it comes to recycling. You get charged to dispose of food waste which is composted down bagged and then sold back to you. Typical irish ways. Charged twice.

    43
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    Mute John Doee
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:10 AM

    Oh , the tree huggers are after me. Well I m off to harpoon a whale, while wearing my fur farmed coat and driving my 5 litre hummer.

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    Mute Dwayne Jordan
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:12 AM

    I have seen people throw their refuse bags into the river in the town I live. Dirty lazy ignorant people. Most of the waste could have been recycled. The most common thing found are overflowing refuse bags of cheap imported lager cans. In most cases they are left only a short distance from recycling banks. Pure laziness!

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    Mute Dave Harris
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:15 AM

    But you pay for your black bin so you’re not saving money.

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    Mute John Doee
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:18 AM

    Your paying anyway

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    Mute Macca Mock
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:20 AM

    Yea i live near a river too and find it very convenient

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    Mute David Conroy
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:55 AM

    Some people do not have the brains to crush a can or cardboard box and prefer instead to leave the bin overflowing. You can take a donkey to water etc. etc.

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    Mute James King
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    Dec 21st 2013, 2:24 PM

    I didn’t know you could put glass in the black bin. No more trips to the bottle bank then. Thanks.

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    Mute Fergus Flanagan
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    Dec 21st 2013, 7:23 PM

    The environment would be a good incentive, and the fact that if you do a weekly shop, at a shopping centre, or infact any stretch of retail, there will be most likely recycling bins there.

    Lazy and selfish mentality.

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    Mute richardmccarthy
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    Dec 21st 2013, 8:38 AM

    As recyclers for many years we dont wait for the binmen to shiw up

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    Mute Jason 0'Toole
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:39 AM

    Always makes me laugh when people get wound up by comments made by the likes of mocca Mack.

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    Mute Dwayne Jordan
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    Dec 21st 2013, 10:25 AM

    Don’t feed into people like macca mock they have nothing for doing but only trying to get a reaction from people. Ignore their stupid comments and they will go away.

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    Mute Harry Webb
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    Dec 21st 2013, 11:24 AM

    Some years ago I returned to Ireland and climbed Bray Head….it was like a rubbish tip….I did hear later that the community did something about it….I do hope that Ireland has improved in caring for the environment… It is not good to be remembered as environmentally irresponsible?

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    Mute Jason 0'Toole
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    Dec 21st 2013, 9:40 AM

    Macca mock even

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    Mute Aunty Simmonite
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    Dec 21st 2013, 1:27 PM

    The glass that you all lovingly sort and pack all ends up in one big truck and is sent over the border. We have no glass making left remember? As folks are mostly too idle to recycle properly all rubbish should be dumped in the same bin and mechanically sorted which would make more sense financially and the recovered material used as is done elsewhere such as mixing glass and old tyres to make road surfaces.

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    Mute Alan Lawlor
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    Dec 21st 2013, 5:49 PM

    You tell us where you would get a mechanical sorter which could separate curry leftovers from paper.

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    Mute Aunty Simmonite
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    Dec 21st 2013, 6:09 PM

    @Alan Lawlor, familiarise yourself with the subject and drop back later.

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    Mute Geraldine Margaret Bowes
    Favourite Geraldine Margaret Bowes
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    Dec 21st 2013, 5:40 PM

    If your green bin is full and u still have stuff to recycle put them in white plastic bags so that the bin men can see that they are recyclable we try to recycle everything and our bin is always full and with the bags the drivers have no problem collecting them!!

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    Mute Miss Filed
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    Dec 22nd 2013, 10:40 AM

    I am also amazed by the number of people who think that recycling somehow discharges all responsibility we have as humans to preserve conditions on earth conducive to continued life on earth! The motto is: reduce, re-use, recycle – in that order!!! So in Germany when people return glass bottles for money, it is hopefully for re-use rather than recycling. We used to have the same here…

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