Correction on the above talked to FIL the animals are never given antibiotics or hormones, they can be given Vaccines but must be recorded and not within a certain amount of time before slaughter.
SORRY
Yep, we don't give ours anything but vaccines, unless they actually get sick, and then it's on a minimalistic approach. We only give vaccines that are relevant to this geographic area, and that's a 7way "blackleg". The mother cows are given wormer on an annual basis, and that's the only chemicals these cows see, unless they're by the highway or happen to crawl through the fence and get in my yard..... I had one die recently, and I couldn't figure out what happened to her. She looked like she had chronic wasting disease or hardware, which is when they eat rusty metal and it perforated one of their stomachs... . I tried various treatments, but there was no improvement over a period of 3-4 months. After she died, I moved the carcass and after it's decomposed some, as the buzzards wouldn't even eat it, it has a faint diesel smell coming from the carcass..... I had a catch pan with diesel in it in my yard where I had been working on a truck. It was covered, but the next morning it's turned over and dumped. Sometime one evening, one of them crawled through the fence or jumped the cattleguard, and I had thought they had just turned it over... . apparently she drank it. Cows are not smart animals, I've found. She was a nuisance about crawling through fences, but she raised a calf every year for the last 6 years, was gentle to handle in the pens, and generally stayed pretty well fleshed, indicating a good forage conversion genetic..... but she took care of herself... .
Anyway, getting back to hormones, those are poor substitutes for genetics, in my humble opinion. Typically, a good genetic bloodline will do just as good on feed as a calf getting hormones that has poor genetics... . The louding for Angus beef is ironic, given their poor forage conversions and weight gain... . They make a good cross breed for durability and maternal instincts, but overall, I feel it's a poor bloodline. Brangus is only slightly better, and the French breeds, while good feed convertors, are horrible in temperament and intelligence... . The best bloodlines I've seen in the hot Southwest is Simmental, Charolaise, and Limousine, not counting various crossbred herds. Another irony on certified Angus beef is that the cattle only have to be a percentage of black to be considered "Angus. " I've had countless calves sold at auction that are again sold as "Angus" beef, but there isn't a drop of Angus blood in any of them.....
Feedlot to slaughterhouse is exactly what I was writing about. Awfull way to treat an animal.
In most instances, yes. But that is corporate controlled, beyond the average producer's control. I have no say in how they are treated, unless I feed them out myself and haul them directly to the slaughterhouse. They pay poorly in that market. Very poorly. I'd lose money to sell them that way, and I can't do that, so they go to auction, where they go to wheat or feedlot... ... Gotta feed the beast. People want to eat, same as animals. I will say, here in the USA, the USDA has the HIGHEST guidelines of ANY NATION ANYWHERE IN THE WORLD!!! Even people that sneak in under the radar when the inspector isn't there have a cleaner standard than any where else in the world. IT'S THE SAFEST FOOD SUPPLY THAT HAS EVER BEEN ON THE PLANET IN MODERN HISTORY!! People find that hard to believe, but then, they haven't been around the world to see what other standards are, if any.
BIG's FIL is going the route many are, trying to find a healthier market. It's not easy, as USDA guidelines are not easy to follow and are costly. I can't sell you beef. I have to be a lisenced butcher/meat processor to sell you meat. I can sell you a living cow, but not processed beef. I've been selling a few, hauling them to the butcher for them. But they have to meet me there and tell the butcher how to cut it. I can't just drop it off. I'm not supposed to, anyway. I've got lots of interest in the idea, but not the facilities to implement it, at the moment. Straight grass fed beef is often not as good as grain fed beef, so I try to implement a mixed regimen, so the beef tastes better... I can only feed a few at a time, and the market is unpredictable, so I may have 10 I keep to feed out, and I may sell all ten in a day, and I may not sell all ten in a month... . And then I usually have to deliver to the processor, and that's a PITA. There is not a convenient butcher anywhere near that can kill and process. And I can't haul a carcass in to be processed and then sell it. It has to be alive. Until interest picks up, and I can find a better way to handle the animals, I'm not going to do much of it.