News

Israel: Volunteers are slowly getting dairy farms started

Dairy
Israel
Market & Price Trends
Innovation & Technology
Published Oct 28, 2023

Tridge summary

Dairy farms in Israel, particularly those located near the Gaza Strip, were heavily affected by the recent attacks and faced extensive damage, loss of workers, and the death of livestock. Many farms were left without supplies and unable to function, resulting in the release of some cows and the death of others due to lack of food. In response, volunteers from across the country have been trained to help on the farms, ensuring the milking and feeding of the remaining cows.
Disclaimer: The above summary was generated by a state-of-the-art LLM model and is intended for informational purposes only. It is recommended that readers refer to the original article for more context.

Original content

See more photos at the bottom of the article. Most of them did not die in the subsequent fighting with Hamas, but were simply murdered. The victims were residents of a kibbutz, lived in one of the towns around the Gaza Strip or danced early in the morning at a dance festival. An Israeli soldier waters a calf on a dairy farm in the military no-go zone. Work is slowly starting again Daily work on the farms is slowly starting again. Many farms suffered extensive damage, workers were killed and many livestock were lost. The cows were left without feed for five days and were not milked, because the kibbutzim were placed in a military no-go zone after the attack. The supply of dairy farms is now slowly starting to function again under military supervision. One dairy farm was forced to release all its cows. There was no food left on the farm and no one to feed them. The cows still roam the area. Dairy farming in Israel Israel has approximately 115,000 cows that produce about 1.6 billion ...
Source: Boerderij
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