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Thread: Buying meat from the farm

  1. #1
    Join Date
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    Buying meat from the farm

    Hi all,
    Have been thinking about buying my meat(lamb & chicken mostly) direct from the farm.
    Has anyone bought from a farm and got it delivered and if so what was the meat like.I normally buy from the local butchers but have been reading about buying direct from the farm instead.They say its much better than your local butcher or supermarket.

    Thanks

    cheers

    2014 Freelander SE TD4
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  2. #2
    Join Date
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    Not sure what you mean by "from the farm".

    Farmers in AU are only permitted to slaughter meat for their own consumption or that of their workers. They are not allowed to sell any of that meat.

    Meat sold for human consumption needs to go through an accredited slaughterhouse.

    Some farmers send animals through the slaughterhouse and then sell the meat, but not many.

    A colleague of mine owns a farm and does this, and we buy a 1/4 or 1/2 a cow from him from time to time.

    We also produce our own pork and poultry for our own personal consumption.

  3. #3
    Join Date
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    Some people in Western Qld. used to go to the late night butcher. Self service, all you need is a gun and a chainsaw.
    URSUSMAJOR

  4. #4
    sheerluck Guest
    Quote Originally Posted by Brian Hjelm View Post
    Some people in Western Qld. used to go to the late night butcher. Self service, all you need is a gun and a chainsaw.
    Some people in Logan do something similar. Still self service, just steal a ute and drive it through the butcher's doors.

  5. #5
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    We called it a "Bush Kill", the local Cockies around Doomadgee seem to just accept it as part of doing business.
    I could always tell when a Bush Kill had happened, beef sales at the store dropped by 50% for a few days.
    Jonesfam

  6. #6
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    If you can find a farmer that will do it, then go for it, but I think the quality of a decent butcher is just as good. I get lamb and beef from family farms, although it doesn't get slaughtered on the farm. It goes from farm to slaughter house / butcher, back to farm in packets. Which I see as no different to farm to slaughter house / butcher to your hands. Big chains and supermarkets are different, but a good local butcher is excellent quality and you're supporting local business as well.

    I can't notice any difference in quality from good local butcher and family farm, but the supermarket is a different story. To me the local butcher is usually the most convenient and equal best quality.
    - Justin

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  7. #7
    Join Date
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    It's been at least six years since I have brought beef from a shop......

    A friend of mine runs beef cattle. When we buy a beast it goes to the abattoir than to a butcher than I pick it up.

    The main risk when buying a whole beast is if the meat is tough than you are stuck with it. We haven't had a bad cut to date. The biggest issue is having to run a freezer to hold 120kg of meat

    It's a whole lot cheaper buying it this way.

    We have now started buying pork direct from the farm as well.

  8. #8
    Join Date
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    We have a small acreage- lifestyle property- and grow 1 head of beef per year. The biggest attraction is the cost; a few years back I added up the total costs including feed, transport, abattoir fee & butchering- and 210kg of beef had cost us about $700.00. We've had one beast that was tough, which means you're eating tough beef for a year.
    I've considered offering, say, a quarter of a beast to colleagues at work. haven't really explored that yet.
    The butcher who does our animals is a family friend. I haven't yet been able to persuade him to cut a whole beast as fillet steak for some reason.

    Why not hire a stock trailer, go and buy a live animal from a farmer and take it straight to the abattoir? There is a simple piece of paperwork required, pretty sure the farmer could provide it.

  9. #9
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    The SIL has a hobby farm, she calls up an "on-site butcher" who kills and cuts it for us,,, awesome stuff, and cheap too

  10. #10
    Join Date
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    Cattle, sheep, and Pork carry diseases that can be passed on to humans by eating the meat, like TB and hiadatis (not sure of spelling), these diseases are screened out at abbatoirs, Regards Frank.

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