Message from @The1stImmortal

Discord ID: 300888445650337793


2017-04-10 06:52:50 UTC  

🆙 | **Kekicorn leveled up!**

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/292872405657845761/300885825476886538/levelup.png

2017-04-10 06:53:18 UTC  

smol business love lvl

2017-04-10 06:54:05 UTC  

I use to work at a butcher shop. Over time, you could tell which meat came from happy and sad animals.

2017-04-10 06:54:12 UTC  

really?

2017-04-10 06:54:18 UTC  

chemically they're different

2017-04-10 06:54:21 UTC  

wow

2017-04-10 06:54:31 UTC  

good thing i treat animals rite

2017-04-10 06:54:44 UTC  

a cow that lived and died sad or scared taste bad compared to a happy cow.

2017-04-10 06:55:00 UTC  

bad like bitter or what?

2017-04-10 06:56:14 UTC  

i don't know how to describe it...if you've ever had grassfed or local meat instead of your normal supermarket meat, you can just...tell.

2017-04-10 06:56:57 UTC  

Happy cows produce more tender cuts.

2017-04-10 06:57:15 UTC  

the meat gets tougher, a little chewier, a little... dry.

2017-04-10 06:57:23 UTC  

more bland as well

2017-04-10 06:58:00 UTC  

^^^

2017-04-10 06:59:30 UTC  

and frozen meats get dry and chewy too because the water in the meat freezes and destroys good proteins, which is why a fresh burger tastes better than, say buger king.

2017-04-10 07:00:37 UTC  

which is why i wish we would impliment more local food. more jobs, more community bonding, better food.

2017-04-10 07:01:33 UTC  

Mostly goat and chicken out by me.

2017-04-10 07:02:00 UTC  

it sounds hippieish, i'm aware, but western society used to be upheld by communities working together.

2017-04-10 07:02:20 UTC  

a lot of cows and pigs around me.

2017-04-10 07:02:52 UTC  

Good stuff, but I haven't found someone selling beef and pork yet. The cows out here are used for dairy.

2017-04-10 07:03:15 UTC  

It sounds like I enjoy eating miserable meat then

2017-04-10 07:03:55 UTC  

it used to be if someone had too much hay, they'd give it to the famer next door and the farmer next door would give them their extra manure, etc. i wanna see that come back

2017-04-10 07:04:35 UTC  

It is, but out in very rural areas.

2017-04-10 07:05:12 UTC  

Seems to be creeping back into the norm though. Just at a slow rate.

2017-04-10 07:05:23 UTC  

oh, i know, i live on six acres in the sticks, which is being turned into a tree farm.

2017-04-10 07:05:54 UTC  

I grew up on a 5.5 acre block just outside a town of 100 people heh

2017-04-10 07:06:28 UTC  

area was mostly grain farming with a bit of cattle/sheep rotated in occasionally

2017-04-10 07:06:43 UTC  

i live on a land owner maintained road, and my friend's dumb car got stuck in sugar sand and 4 of my neighbors helped get the car out. good ol southern boys.

2017-04-10 07:06:59 UTC  

your friend's dumb car, or your dumb friend's car?

2017-04-10 07:07:09 UTC  

both.

2017-04-10 07:07:29 UTC  

My mother grew up on a farm back in the 50's. Cows, chickens, fresh strawberries. If was Americana af.

2017-04-10 07:07:29 UTC  

ok I'm off home folks, ciao

2017-04-10 07:07:44 UTC  

bai!

2017-04-10 07:07:52 UTC  

bye

2017-04-10 07:08:11 UTC  

we're making that for our kids. americana.

2017-04-10 07:09:37 UTC  

my brother and sister in law and niece live next door, my son is her best friend, and collectively we're teaching them to grow plants, we're gonna get chickens for eggs and when they're old enough show them where the meat comes from.

2017-04-10 07:10:32 UTC  

based

2017-04-10 07:10:33 UTC  

🆙 | **Renaar leveled up!**

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/292872405657845761/300890281492873216/levelup.png

2017-04-10 07:10:42 UTC  

they play outside in the dirt, they have fruit trees they helped plant, so they like to tend to them themselves. and they're 3 and 4.

2017-04-10 07:11:01 UTC  

My parents and I have taken the hydroponic route, but we're expanding outside with raised beds.

2017-04-10 07:11:04 UTC  

that's a great life, glad to hear it