If that once proud Viking nation allows this then they're all steers ruled by women and unworthy of their name, being literally the mark of Dan, one of the twelve tribes of Israel likened to a lion's welp!
Cows are nowhere as stinky as wood stoves, yet those are considered carbon neutral, since their fuel will literaly oxidize in the field if not gathered and burned. Uneaten grass is just like dead wood, releasing all that carbon back into the air.
Cow burps and farts are nowhere near as bad as wood smoke (or the flatulence resulting from the local taco truck) and they consume literally tons of dried grass that would otherwise die in place, turning grayish black, releasing all the CO2 they once absorbed while green.
Grass grows better with cows for several reasons, and cow footprints improve land water retention and greatly increase reseeding of a field. Cow manure inoculates the soil with bacteria and provides food for worms, bugs, and othere digesters of the dead grass not eaten but trampled in the soil. Cow pee is like liquid gold, practically nitrous oxide for the growth of anything green, being a direct shot of pure nitrogen with instant results. And cow spit, coupled with the pulling action on the grass when being eaten, stimulates regrowth of leaves, preventing the seed heads from forming early, which turns the field a dormant shade of yellow tan in mid June, in these parts.
The Lord mentions cattle by name in the book of Genesis, unlike any other animals, immediately after the grass and herbs of the field. Ask any rabbi and they will tell you nothing is put randomly in place in scripture. Cows and grass were literally made for each other!
And we would not have a civilization without milk and manure. How would anyone survive the winter without a garden pruducing tubers and dairy products? In the vast majority of the world, you can't grow much anything in the native ground without some kind of fertilizer. In the old days it was all composted manure, and the kind that comes from cows has the ideal carbon-nitrogen ratio all by itself.
But don't take my word for it, Alan Savory, a former land management professional in Africa, who put his theories to test on his own ranch in Zimbabwe, has a lot to say about the benefits of livestock for regreening desertified wilderness:
(this was not written by AI)
Cows are nowhere as stinky as wood stoves, yet those are considered carbon neutral, since their fuel will literaly oxidize in the field if not gathered and burned. Uneaten grass is just like dead wood, releasing all that carbon back into the air.
Cow burps and farts are nowhere near as bad as wood smoke (or the flatulence resulting from the local taco truck) and they consume literally tons of dried grass that would otherwise die in place, turning grayish black, releasing all the CO2 they once absorbed while green.
Grass grows better with cows for several reasons, and cow footprints improve land water retention and greatly increase reseeding of a field. Cow manure inoculates the soil with bacteria and provides food for worms, bugs, and othere digesters of the dead grass not eaten but trampled in the soil. Cow pee is like liquid gold, practically nitrous oxide for the growth of anything green, being a direct shot of pure nitrogen with instant results. And cow spit, coupled with the pulling action on the grass when being eaten, stimulates regrowth of leaves, preventing the seed heads from forming early, which turns the field a dormant shade of yellow tan in mid June, in these parts.
The Lord mentions cattle by name in the book of Genesis, unlike any other animals, immediately after the grass and herbs of the field. Ask any rabbi and they will tell you nothing is put randomly in place in scripture. Cows and grass were literally made for each other!
And we would not have a civilization without milk and manure. How would anyone survive the winter without a garden pruducing tubers and dairy products? In the vast majority of the world, you can't grow much anything in the native ground without some kind of fertilizer. In the old days it was all composted manure, and the kind that comes from cows has the ideal carbon-nitrogen ratio all by itself.
But don't take my word for it, Alan Savory, a former land management professional in Africa, who put his theories to test on his own ranch in Zimbabwe, has a lot to say about the benefits of livestock for regreening desertified wilderness:
(this was not written by AI)