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HomeOur inspectionsmarket and collecting stations22.07.2010 Inspection of Leeuwarden cattle market

22.07.2010 Inspection of Leeuwarden cattle market

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Eyes on Animals would like to congratulate the managers of this cattle market, which has gone from a market with serious welfare problems in 2005 to one of the "best" we have inspected. Since our last visit in 2009, they have installed more water troughs and built individual pens for bulls. There was also no violent handling of the animals today. We did question why some children present at the market were allowed to use sticks on the animals, not being mature enough yet to really understand how and when to use them. There were not any "downer" cows. All animals were tied on correctly and had long enough ropes to lie down but not too long to risk entanglement. Rubber stoppers had been placed on a gate door to limit the noise it makes. The entire floor of the market is covered in straw, creating a non-slip surface and giving the animals some padding for their feet.

Nevertheless, some cows had full udders and were dripping milk. Because the man responsible for milking them at the market was sick and had not been replaced, the cows were left as such. We therefore hand-milked several in the hope of providing some relief.

 

 

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Markets and collecting stations

Farm animals are often sold and bought at livestock markets, or collected at stations where larger trucks come to pick them up later to transport them further. These places can be very stressful for animals, and are also unfortunately a great place for diseases to spread. Animals are brought in from many different places, unloaded from the truck, often weighed one at a time, and then rushed towards different pens where they are forced to wait for hours, sometimes without water, feed or bedding. Animals that were raised together, and even mothers and their offspring, can be separated. The animals are then reloaded onto new trucks with unfamiliar animals, which can cause fighting, and head to a new destination. Eyes on Animals regularly conducts unannounced visits of livestock markets and collecting stations in the Netherlands and Belgium. We check on conditions of the unloading equipment and pens and make sure that unfit animals are given a quiet area to rest, or if serious, immediately euthanized. We are in dialogue with the managers about providing water and bedding for the animals, milking females in lactation, and reducing any rough handling or other unnecessary causes of animal suffering.