Organo Farms

Organo Farms We organo farms Aims to provide eat able products which was rasid organicly and having rich nutritio

20/01/2023

Collection 2023 all sold Alhamdulilah, new booking open in first week of Feb.

Monthly Palai Service available

Weight day at organo farms 📊. weights will be shared with owners .Book your palai animals for Eid2023 🐐🐂
31/10/2022

Weight day at organo farms 📊. weights will be shared with owners .
Book your palai animals for Eid2023 🐐🐂

We are Offering Mutton directly from our farmFREE from antibiotic, steroid & other harmful traces.100% Male animalsHealt...
17/10/2022

We are Offering Mutton directly from our farm

FREE from antibiotic, steroid & other harmful traces.
100% Male animals
Healthy & Hygienic Environment
4Acar Grazing Area For Animals

Min Order 4kg
@ 2099Rs/kg Clean Meat

Delivery Days Thursday & Sunday
Book your Slot now
+92 322 0006888

Rawalpindi/Islamabad Only

18/09/2022
Our ERP System live now , Alhamdulilah
07/09/2022

Our ERP System live now , Alhamdulilah

Address

Chountra
Rawalpindi
47590

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Organic Chicken VS Conventionl Farming

There’s a lot of conflicting chatter out there about what does and does not happen on chicken farms, and what difference between organic farming and conventional farming is The factors you might consider when choosing between organic and conventionally reared chicken cover a range of angles. Is it good for you? Is it humane? How does it impact on the environment? It’s a complicated question, but there are some very clear issues to take into account.


  • Ranging and Housing Conventional chicken farms are under no obligation to allow their birds to freely range. This often means that they’re reared in huge flocks in sheds without natural daylight. The focus is more on cost efficiency and profit margins, less on welfare. In a crowded environment, the birds have little or no opportunity to follow their instincts to peck, scratch, flap, run, and perch and take dust baths. As the birds are stressed, aggression and bullying are common. And when illness strikes, it can rip through a whole batch of birds in no time. All animals are programmed to roam freely in an open area – thriving in the warmth of the sun and foraging on grass.Poultry reared to organic standards must have ready access to pasture, so the birds can follow their instincts and graze on fresh grass. They live in flocks of limited size and maximum stocking densities mean they have plenty of space. They eat natural, organic food that’s free from GM ingredients and contains absolutely no chemical growth promoters. We’re believers in the notion that you are what you eat, so we care about what the meat we eat has eaten, too.

  • Drugs In line with traditional and natural farming practices, organic producers are forbidden from ‘blanket treating’ their birds with drugs of any description. On intensive chicken farms, birds are systematically dosed with antibiotics – often by way of their food and water – whether they’re ill or not. It’s a prevention-rather-than-cure philosophy. Bacteria thrive in dense flocks, so as there’s a good chance the majority of birds will get an infection at some time, they’re dosed upfront, in anticipation. When animals bound for the food chain are given medicines, the law demands a ‘withdrawal period’ that allows all traces of the drug to leave their systems before slaughter. Even with this precaution in place, we’re a little uneasy about the idea of eating meat from animals that have been fed antibiotics throughout their lives. In an organic system, the majority of birds will never receive antibiotics. And those that do will be subject to double the withdrawal period recommended by drug manufacturers. When medicines are given on an organic farm, it’s always on a case-by-case basis, with welfare in mind and under veterinary advice.

  • Slaughter Age? For intensively farmed chickens, it’s all about speed. In close quarters (where exercise is limited) and with constantly available food, birds gain weight at an unnaturally rapid rate. Organic birds are more leisurely, their muscles grow strong as they roam around, scratching and flapping. The food eaten by conventional birds is highly concentrated and grain based. Ingredients include high-protein to promote fast growth. Rapid growth means farms can turn around more batches of chickens and earn more money. It makes economic sense, but welfare and quality suffer. Organic farming is on a go-slow when it comes to growth. Birds mature at the speed nature intended; so organic farmers necessarily produce a smaller quantity but better quality of birds throughout the year.