Saturday, September 1, 2007

Free range outsell battery eggs for the first time

No points for guessing this headline didn't come out of the US. Not even the People's Republic of Berkeley. It's the British of course. But do they really get 'free-range?' Not clear, the numbers appear to be based on battery vs. non-battery rather than free-range vs. not free range and includes 'barn' and 'roaming' hens. But I still maintain (see previous post) that any signals by consumers which are significant enough to change production in favor of animal welfare are better than none.

Sales of free range, barn and organic eggs from chickens allowed to roam outdoors accounted for just over 50 per cent of total sales last year - a huge turnaround from five years previously.

It is one of the most startling illustrations of how the trend towards buying "ethical" food is bringing huge changes to the food industry. Sainsbury's announced this year that it planned to phase out battery eggs by 2012.

Architectural Genius

I for one would like to see more houses like this. You could make up a whole neighborhood of houses tumbling down a hill. And this one doubles as political art:

[A]n upside-down house built by Polish artist Daniel Czapiewski at the centre for education and regional promotion in the village of Szymbark, Poland. Czapiewski reportedly intended to show the state of affairs in his homeland with the house that rests on its own roof and represents the times of the Communist area as well as the change of values in the former Eastern bloc countries