Sunday, November 16, 2008 Cattle call
Courtesy of Will Harris
Will Harris and PossumBy Hope S. Philbrick
The cattle raised by Will Harris roam land that’s belonged in the
Harris family for five generations. The grass-fed Harris Family
Heritage Beef is sold at Whole Foods Market and is on the menu at
several Atlanta area restaurants. The Harris farm has come full circle
in its production, transitioning to and then away from
industrialization. The Sunday Paper talked with Harris to learn more.
Q What’s the history of White Oak Pastures? A
My great-grandfather came to this farm in 1866 after the Civil War (or
what he called the Northern Invasion). He’d had a farm prior to the war
and lost it. He was an officer, a Calvary Captain, and officers who
could afford to provide for their own outfits did so with the idea that
when they won the war they would be repaid—but it didn’t work out quite
like the brochure had promised. He had an uncle who was a medical
doctor who started him here on this land, and we’ve been here ever
since. My daughters are the fifth generation raising cattle on this
land.
This is cotton and peanut country, but he was a cattleman. When his
son (my grandfather) took over, he expanded it, and they slaughtered
one cow and two or three hogs every day—that was before refrigeration.
That meat was loaded onto a mule-drawn wagon and hauled up the road to
Bluffton, where he had a little route in town to deliver beef to the
general stores, hotels and boarding houses. During my father’s watch,
which was in the post-World War II era, that whole system went away. It
was the beginning of the industrialization of the beef business. During
the first part of his watch, we raised calves and loaded them onto
double-decker semis and shipped them to Nebraska, Iowa or Kansas to be
corn-fed.
I went to the University of Georgia and studied the science of
hormone implants, confinement feeding, antibiotics and all the other
industrial tools to help make cows gain weight quicker and help them
survive in confinement on a high-carbohydrate diet. As a young man I
really enjoyed that and got good at it, but, as I grew into middle age,
certain aspects of it I enjoyed less and less. I came to dislike the
industrialization of it, of loading cows onto a truck for a 30-hour
drive with no rest, no food or water, where the cows on the top level
would defecate and urinate on the cows on the bottom. I started reading
about sophisticated consumers who want to eat beef that’s raised
differently. I knew that I could raise it that way and, in 1995,
started transitioning the herd and ultimately obtained a production
system that’s better for the environment, our cattle and the health of
the people who eat our beef.
What was involved in transitioning the herd?
Since the end of World War II, science had developed a lot of tools
that allow farmers to produce beef quickly and cheaply. We gave these
up. We don’t use artificial hormones or antibiotics. We don’t confine
animals into a feedlot. We don’t feed them high-carbohydrate corn diet
or other unnatural feeds. They eat grass and hay because that’s the way
nature intended. In our program, we emulate the natural production
system before man industrialized it. It’s a holistic program. We are
grass farmers and herdsmen. We have 1,000 acres of land, and I lease
about that much more for our 650 cows.
We built a USDA-approved processing plan on my farm, and I believe
it’s the only farmer-owned on-farm USDA-approved processing plant in
the United States.
How have consumers responded?
It’s been real good. There’s a growing demand for beef that’s raised
naturally among sophisticated consumers who care about environmental
sustainability, humane treatment of animals, the integrity of a local
food production system and who care about carbon footprint, food miles
and other green initiatives.
We are in a unique position—by virtue of the fact that we own our
own processing facility and it sits here on the farm where the cattle
are raised—to educate people. We’re very proud of the way we raise our
cattle and produce our beef. We invite people to come here and let us
show them what we do. Recently, the Georgia Restaurant Association
organized a tour for chefs. Just call us, and make an appointment and
come. SP Resource: http://www.sundaypaper.com/More/Archives/tabid/98/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/3308/Cattle-call.aspx
|