Eating Plants

Plant-based food is the world’s fastest growing culinary trend

For Plant Based Eating at its best; see …

Eating Plants website

EATING PLANTS is the latest project from award-winning Australian documentary filmmakers Kate Clere and Mick McIntyre (Kangaroo: A Love-Hate Story), who travelled the world throughout 2021 to shoot the series.

Series co-creator Kate Clere comments “We wanted to offer meat and plant-eaters alike tips on flavours, textures, tastes, and offer a new range of recipes that will add protein and nutrients to plant-based meals. The series aims to help educate people around this delicious new culinary trend; how to cook, shop, snack, and pack great healthy food in lunchboxes.”

Series co-creator Mick McIntyre says “We want to highlight how quickly this way of cooking and eating is growing and help audiences open their eyes to the benefits of plant-based eating. Many people are recognising the need to switch to a more plant-based diet for their health and for the planet, and we want to show audiences just how easy it can be.”

EATING PLANTS has tips, recipe ideas and benefits of a vegan diet from chefs and experts across the globe. The series was filmed across six different countries – the United States, United Kingdom, Germany, Israel, China and Australia.

See lots more on the EATING PLANTS Website

How does eating plants help Roos

If rescued, orphaned Joeys take 24/7 care for at least a year when their mums are slaughtered

PETA: ‘Every beef burger, steak, or minced-meat meal creates a crisis for biodiversity. Australian farmers use around 54% of land– a huge 4 million square kilometres – to graze animals for their flesh, skin, and secretions. Only 23% of our land is earmarked for conservation. Preparing land for farming animals is not as simple as it may sound – it often involves razing native forestry, which destroys the habitats of animals who live there, like koalas (and kangaroos). A report by the World Wildlife Fund and RSPCA Queensland found that Australia ranks among the world’s worst deforestation hotspots, alongside Brazil, Congo, Indonesia, and New Guinea. Most of this deforestation is done for grazing cows and sheep.

Dr Martin Taylor, the senior scientist with WWF Australia, told the ABC programme Hack the following: “People do see their local favourite patch of bush being bulldozed for a housing or industrial estate, or a road …. That turns out to be a small percentage of the total destruction in Eastern Australia. Most of it is out bush, far from the public gaze, and most people don’t know it’s going on.”’

The Animal Agriculture industry is largely responsible for causing and accelerating the climate crisis

  • in the clearing 100,000s of hectares of native oxygen producing bush

  • in the redirection of waterways;

  • being the main contributor of gases like methane into the atmosphere

  • being a major stake holder in the kangaroo slaughter industry

  • taking away wildlife habitat, food, water and migratory pathways

White Colonial Farming: Since the invasion of white man into Australia over two hundred years ago, farmers (who were growing European mono crops and feeding European animals) considered the kangaroo a pest and the native grasses and forests as useless. They preceded to clear the forests and plant European grasses to feed this alien stock - cows, sheep, pigs etc. Instead of sustaining the environment (as Kangaroos and native forests do), this type of farming destroys the environment. This attitude has not changed to this day.

Clearing Land and Killing wildlife: The world population has increased markedly since the second world war as has the meat consumption increased per head of population including in Asian countries. This meant that ‘meat producing countries like Australia and New Zealand continued to clear millions of acres of native bush, which was wildlife habitat, so they could raise more cows, sheep and pigs for slaughter. The developers of these factory and high yield farms just bulldoze down trees with koalas in them and bulldoze through wombats in their holes. The kangaroos lose their migratory pathways and so dare to come onto to cleared land. For that they are shot, die on exclusion fences or are struck by vehicles. With the death of the kangaroos comes the death of our life sustaining native forests.

https://ourworldindata.org/meat-production#

Climate Change: Climate Change is the reality that we live with every day with cycles of excessive drought, excessive fire storms, excessive rain and excessive floods. The main factors effecting our climate crisis is massive clearing of oxygen producing trees all over the country and the world; and the production of massive amounts of greenhouse gases (like methane and carbon dioxide) from the animal agriculture farms, vehicles, and other industries. As climate change continues to bite, animal agriculture, and any other agriculture that fails to work with native ecosystems rather than against them, is economically and ecologically doomed.

Benefits of a plant based diet: The personal benefits to a plant based diet (like better health or more energy) are well known. It is reported by Michael B. Eisen & Patrick O. Brown that we could reduce CO2 emissions by 68% if animal agriculture was stopped and plant based sustainable agricultural farming practices were implemented. As less land is required for plant based sustainable agriculture, large sections of land can be returned to the wildlife especially kangaroos for bush regeneration.

Education?: The colonial attitude to kangaroos still persists in the rural communities. The concept of “kangaroos being a keystone species” who are “responsible in Australia for bush regeneration”, therefore are essential in the process of “converting CO2 to oxygen” and in “reducing our carbon footprint” is not understood by the people who are responsible at any level for the slaughter of kangaroos. Many believe that education is required.

 

Of Special Interest