Tag Archives: Blog Action Day

On Blog Action Day 2011 we comment about the Price of Eggs in Hedon!

WE EAT ELEVEN BILLION EGGS A YEAR according to the British Eggs Information service – and we spent over £860 millon on them last year! The egg industry had a retail market value of £868m in 2010. In considering this massive value, then it prompts a question: How come half a dozen eggs in one shop can cost £1.20 whilst only 39p in another?

Fresh and Fruity greengrocers in Hedon town centre sell cartons of 6 eggs for 39p – but in Heron a similar half a dozen costs 55p and at Co-op they cost a whacking £1.20.

The answer obviously lies in the production methods used – some farms and producers put greater emphasis on the welfare of the chickens which in turn raises production costs. There are four key production methods:

The laying cages system is the most common production system. This involves birds being kept in cages. In the UK, conventional ‘battery’ cages are being phased out and by 1st January 2012 will be banned across the European Union. They are being replaced by larger, enriched or colony cages.

Food is supplied in troughs fitted to the cage fronts and an automatic water supply is provided. The units are kept at an even temperature and are ventilated. Electric lighting provides an optimum day length throughout the year.The cages have sloping mesh floors so that the eggs roll forward out of the reach of the birds to await collection.

In the barn system hens are able to move freely around the house. The EU Welfare of Laying Hens Directive stipulates a maximum stocking density of 9 hens per square metre of useable floor space. Perches for the hens must be installed to allow 15 centimetres of perch per hen. Litter must account for one third of the ground surface. This is used for scratching and dust bathing.

Eggs termed free range, are produced from hens that have continuous daytime access to runs which are mainly covered with vegetation. The hen house conditions for free range hens must comply with the regulations for birds kept in barn systems, with a maximum stocking density of 9 hens per square metre. Hens must be provided with nest boxes and perches.

Hens producing organic eggs are always free range. In addition, hens must be fed an organically produced diet and ranged on organic land.

How do you know which eggs you have bought? All eggs have to be marked with a code showing the type of farming system which will be 3 for cage, 2 Barn, 1 Free Range and 0 for Organic. The code will also show country of origin and farm identification. So a typical Fresh and Fruity egg marked:

3UK16378

reveals that the egg is from a caged bird, produced in the UK from Field Farm Eggs in South Newbald near York.

Some eggs will include additional information. Eggs with the British Lion mark and a ‘best before date’ on the shell, denotes eggs produced to a stringent Code of Practice incorporating the latest research and advice from scientists and vets.

The methods used in egg production have obvious cost implications. However, in spite of the obvious, the latest statistics from DEFRA reveal that the average price paid by packers to egg producers for all eggs at the beginning of 2011, was 69.7 pence per dozen - note price is per dozen - which represents a 6.9% decrease on the same period in 2010. This means the average price of half-a-dozen eggs – before wholesale and retail profit and costs is added – should be around 35p!

So perhaps the carton of six eggs from Field Farm, via Fresh and Fruity at 39p, is nearer to the kind of price we should be paying for 6 eggs!?

This article has been re-published from July as a contribution to Blog Action Day 2011.

Waste Water – What happens at Saltend plant?

BLOG ACTION DAY 2010: WATER

THE WASTE WATER treatment works at Saltend certainly makes its presence felt on occasions via bad odours (which Yorkshire Water have pledged to tackle) – but what actually happens there? This is the question put to Yorkshire Water (YW) who provided a fascinating insight ‘behind-the-scenes’.

On average people in Yorkshire use about 150 litres of water a day through washing, cleansing, drinking and toilet flushes. 95% of this water returns to YW via our toilets, washing machines and sinks. 20,000 miles of sewers takes this, and drained surface water, to 0ne of 631 waste water treatment works (WWTW) across the region.

Large objects are removed first at the WWTW . Metal bars trap larger objects brought via the sewers such as nappies, rags, paper and other toilet debris.
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Blog Action Day – Fri 15th October 2010

BLOG ACTION DAY FRIDAY 15th OCTOBER 2010: WATER

Blog Action Day is an annual event held every October 15 that unites the world’s bloggers in posting about the same issue on the same day with the aim of sparking a global discussion and driving collective action.

Last year bloggers in 155 countries across six continents wrote about the Environment, and turned Blog Action Day 2009 into one of the largest social change events ever held on the web.

This year’s subject is WATER.

“Right now, almost a billion people on the planet don’t have access to clean, safe drinking water. That’s one in eight of us who are subject to preventable disease and even death because of something that many of us take for granted. Access to clean water is not just a human rights issue. It’s an environmental issue. An animal welfare issue. A sustainability issue. Water is a global issue, and it affects all of us.”

Join with the Hedon Blog on Friday 15th October and write, post, Twitter, Facebook and blog your views, opinions, rants, articles on this subject!

Find out more from:

http://blogactionday.change.org/

Hedon Blog – Favourite Bits 2009

SINCE JANUARY 2009 the Hedon Blog has featured 376 posts. This makes finding favourites a difficult task, but here we go….

Image-jpg

R100 Toronto August 1930

Discovering the town’s rich history has been fun but not that difficult: The history of the town is all around us in its buildings, features and people. I am particularly fond of finding the link between Hedon and a Scotch Whisky.

The implication made in a local history book that Hedon had links with the R100 airship  provided material for Hedon and the Airships. I would have loved to find a photograph of the R100 flying over St Augustine’s Church!

The HOTI campaign against the proposed incinerator has provided lots of material for the Blog and I wish the campaign well in 2010. However my favourite has been Let us change the climate – the odd rant can be fun!

Other campaigns supported by the Hedon Blog include the ERYLINk to improve health and social care in the East Riding and Blog Action Day on Climate Change. The latter resulted in the Hedon Blog being discussed on Radio Humberside.

Another Blog post on MP’s Expenses in May 2009 captured the mood of cynicism that existed towards politics and politicians in light of the expenses scandal revealed by the Daily Telegraph in that month. The article conveyed the message that grassroots politics needed to be re-invigorated!

These are some of the posts that have pleased the Hedon Blogger during 2009. Don’t agree with him? Then let the Hedon Blog know!

And remember! You too can become a Hedon Blogger! See You can help….

Image: HOTI Dog by Linda Hinchcliffe

Message from the organisers of Blog Action Day #BAD09

Hey bloggers,

You did it!

Tell the worldYesterday you and bloggers in 155 countries across six continents wrote about a single issue that impacts us all, and turned Blog Action Day 2009 into one of the largest social change events ever held on the web.

Your participation helped change the conversation and showed the power of the web to connect people across the world who despite their varied backgrounds have one shared desire: to make a difference. According to blogpulse, we increased the number of posts about climate change on a given day by 500%, and CNN wrote a great article covering the excitement and diversity of today’s event across the web and around the world.
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Let us change the climate with our waste burning incinerator! #BAD09

Chimney SmokeYes… the simple way to change the climate – build an incinerator! In fact build lots of them!

  • Incineration involves the release of high levels of CO2, the main climate warming gas.
  • Incineration creates toxic emissions and hazardous ash which are potentially harmful.
  • Reduce the incentive to recycle and re-use waste material – just burn it instead!
  • Demoralise those who want to live greener healthier lifestyles – ignore public opposition.
  • Ignore the alternatives to waste incinerators; Autoclaving, Sorting Residual Waste, Mechanical Biological Treatment - MBT, Anaerobic Digestion – AD, etc, etc,.

And there you have it… Climate Changed and we can all choke within a generation!

Posted for Blog Action Day 2009.

Yorkshire Water explain efforts to prevent flooding #BAD09

Yorkshire Water were understandably stretched to the limit during the great floods of the summer 2007.

In this YouTube video they explain about their efforts during and after the floods, including a £16m investment in Hull to upgrade and improve their pumping operations which normally feeds waste water through to their treatment facility at Satend near Hedon.

more about “Preventing flooding“, posted with vodpod

The Floods – Freak weather event or first of many? #BAD09

The floods have changed how I see the world. Whenever it rains you think ‘is it all going to happen again?’

Flooded_VillageThese words from a school student in Hull sum up the fears of thousands of people in Hull and Holderness whose lives were dramatically affected by the summer floods of 2007.

The rainfall in the UK in June and July 2007 that prompted flooding locally in Hull and Holderness was about 20% higher than ever seen before in records that date back to 1879. Two months of rain fell in less than two days! The real fear is that we can all expect to see more extreme weather events like this in the future.

In Hull, roads became rivers, water rose through the floorboards of thousands of homes and drains overflowed onto pavements and into properties. Residents claim drains had not been cleared properly in recent years – adding to the amount of water flowing into unprotected homes. Experts say developments on the flood plains of the Humber and the fashion for paving gardens contributed to the scale of the disaster. The village of Burstwick near Hull was still under water yesterday. From Daily Mail 5th July 2007

According to the Environment Agency, 2.3 million homes and 185,000 businesses are at risk of flooding in England and Wales. This represents property, land and assets in excess of £200 billion. Or more bluntly this equates to homes and public places being threatened by potential flood waters which could cause devastation and destruction on a massive scale.

Recent Sea Level RiseWhile there is some debate in the scientific community whether the Hull and Holderness flooding of 2007 was a result of climate change,there is general acceptance that the sea level has been rising at a mean rate of 1.8 mm per year over the last 100 years. It is anticipated that coastal areas globally will be threatened as sea levels rise. Where coastal areas are used for agricultural and industrial purposes, flooding caused by rising sea level could also have a disastrous impact on rural economies and livelihoods.

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