deadaim
09-14-2008, 12:27 PM
I found this from the Free Republic while doing a search for ways to get deer hair off the meat enjoy:D
PT 1
The Real Roadkill Cafe (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1365376/posts)
Columbus Alive ^ (http://www.freerepublic.com/%5Ehttp://www.columbusalive.com/2005/20050316/031605/03160513.html)| March 16, 2005 | Bret Liebendorfer
Posted on Friday, March 18, 2005 9:41:36 AM by MississippiMasterpiece (http://www.freerepublic.com/~mississippimasterpie/)
Activity in the wilderness community came to an abrupt halt. Foraging for food, repairing homes and tending to primitive agriculture would have to wait—someone had just returned carrying a freshly killed deer, and cleaning, preparing and cooking it for the night’s feast became a communal priority.
Even though most of the people there considered themselves vegetarians or vegans, eating this type of meat was acceptable. The deer hadn’t been brought down by a gun, or even a bow and arrow. It was roadkill.
Few studies have been conducted to measure the number of animals killed by automobiles. High school science teacher Brewster Barnett (aka “Dr. Splatt”) has had students from all over New England participate in roadkill censuses every spring for the last 13 years, and they estimate that 250,000 animals become traffic victims everyday.
But despite the astronomical casualty count, little has been done to find uses for the animals. At least, not until a group of activists decided to educate others about eating these transportation byproducts.
Like many Americans living in the land of catch-phrase T-shirts, Columbus’ Rob Erisbright first heard about people eating roadkill from Roadkill Cafe merchandise. In grade school, he associated it with “hillbillies and West Virginia.”
That changed after a 2003 bike trip to the Georgia gathering described above, where Erisbright learned the step-by-step process of turning animals killed by cars into delicacies.
Erisbright had been “mostly vegetarian,” and the whole ordeal of preparing an animal by hand was difficult. “We cut the deer into little cubes, and the next day, when I went to sleep, I had visions of the deer getting cut up and gutting it,” he said.
Now the 25-year-old enjoys roadkill regularly with his friends. Last fall, they found two deer and spent three days preparing the carcasses in their campus-area house; the hide from one of them is still hanging in the basement, waiting to be tanned.
Erisbright and his friends are not alone. Activists all over the country are being inspired by an organization called Wildroots. Located on a 30-acre homestead in North Carolina, these “green anarchists” are critical of modern society and believe that reconnecting with wildness will abolish the oppressive institutions of civilization.
Members of Wildroots live a primitive lifestyle and practice earth-based skills, like primitive shelter building, hide tanning, herbal medicine and crafts.
Alternative food sources, like roadkill, are essential to their cause, as is outreach, and the group travels the country promoting their lifestyle at conferences and workshops. One of their publications, a zine called Feral Forager, details how to eat roadkill.
For those disgusted by the notion of eating a dead animal off the side of the road, Erisbright’s friend Matt Snyder said it isn’t as gross as many people think.
“I think people should get into eating roadkill because it’s food and it’s out there. You might as well not let it go to waste,” Snyder said. “It also tastes delicious.”
It’s not just roadkill’s availability that makes it attractive. Jennifer Kitchen, another of the local roadkill proponents, said traditional, factory-farmed meat is plagued by unsavory consequences, from animal cruelty to the harmful environmental effects of using fossil fuels to ship it long distances.
And most land used for growing grain and vegetables goes to feeding livestock that in turn are used to feed humans, rather than simply growing plant food for us, she said; were it not for so many Americans insisting on a meat-based diet, there would naturally be more room for wild game to roam and more land to grow crops for people.
PT 1
The Real Roadkill Cafe (http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1365376/posts)
Columbus Alive ^ (http://www.freerepublic.com/%5Ehttp://www.columbusalive.com/2005/20050316/031605/03160513.html)| March 16, 2005 | Bret Liebendorfer
Posted on Friday, March 18, 2005 9:41:36 AM by MississippiMasterpiece (http://www.freerepublic.com/~mississippimasterpie/)
Activity in the wilderness community came to an abrupt halt. Foraging for food, repairing homes and tending to primitive agriculture would have to wait—someone had just returned carrying a freshly killed deer, and cleaning, preparing and cooking it for the night’s feast became a communal priority.
Even though most of the people there considered themselves vegetarians or vegans, eating this type of meat was acceptable. The deer hadn’t been brought down by a gun, or even a bow and arrow. It was roadkill.
Few studies have been conducted to measure the number of animals killed by automobiles. High school science teacher Brewster Barnett (aka “Dr. Splatt”) has had students from all over New England participate in roadkill censuses every spring for the last 13 years, and they estimate that 250,000 animals become traffic victims everyday.
But despite the astronomical casualty count, little has been done to find uses for the animals. At least, not until a group of activists decided to educate others about eating these transportation byproducts.
Like many Americans living in the land of catch-phrase T-shirts, Columbus’ Rob Erisbright first heard about people eating roadkill from Roadkill Cafe merchandise. In grade school, he associated it with “hillbillies and West Virginia.”
That changed after a 2003 bike trip to the Georgia gathering described above, where Erisbright learned the step-by-step process of turning animals killed by cars into delicacies.
Erisbright had been “mostly vegetarian,” and the whole ordeal of preparing an animal by hand was difficult. “We cut the deer into little cubes, and the next day, when I went to sleep, I had visions of the deer getting cut up and gutting it,” he said.
Now the 25-year-old enjoys roadkill regularly with his friends. Last fall, they found two deer and spent three days preparing the carcasses in their campus-area house; the hide from one of them is still hanging in the basement, waiting to be tanned.
Erisbright and his friends are not alone. Activists all over the country are being inspired by an organization called Wildroots. Located on a 30-acre homestead in North Carolina, these “green anarchists” are critical of modern society and believe that reconnecting with wildness will abolish the oppressive institutions of civilization.
Members of Wildroots live a primitive lifestyle and practice earth-based skills, like primitive shelter building, hide tanning, herbal medicine and crafts.
Alternative food sources, like roadkill, are essential to their cause, as is outreach, and the group travels the country promoting their lifestyle at conferences and workshops. One of their publications, a zine called Feral Forager, details how to eat roadkill.
For those disgusted by the notion of eating a dead animal off the side of the road, Erisbright’s friend Matt Snyder said it isn’t as gross as many people think.
“I think people should get into eating roadkill because it’s food and it’s out there. You might as well not let it go to waste,” Snyder said. “It also tastes delicious.”
It’s not just roadkill’s availability that makes it attractive. Jennifer Kitchen, another of the local roadkill proponents, said traditional, factory-farmed meat is plagued by unsavory consequences, from animal cruelty to the harmful environmental effects of using fossil fuels to ship it long distances.
And most land used for growing grain and vegetables goes to feeding livestock that in turn are used to feed humans, rather than simply growing plant food for us, she said; were it not for so many Americans insisting on a meat-based diet, there would naturally be more room for wild game to roam and more land to grow crops for people.