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In 1908, Washington’s Carnation Milk Farms revolutionized dairy breeding through a unique blend of compassionate animal care and rigorous genetics. By treating cows as “mothers” deserving of patience, founder E.A. Stuart boosted milk yields while pioneering humane practices—his prize Holstein Segis Pietertje Prospect (“Possum Sweetheart”) produced 10x the era’s average. Carnation’s data-driven breeding and stress-reduction strategies predated modern welfare science, creating genetics that underpin 30% of North American herds. Their legacy—spanning corporate evolution into pet food giant Friskies—proves ethical farming and productivity aren’t mutually exclusive, offering lessons for today’s climate-smart dairies.
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By The Bullvine5
33 ratings
In 1908, Washington’s Carnation Milk Farms revolutionized dairy breeding through a unique blend of compassionate animal care and rigorous genetics. By treating cows as “mothers” deserving of patience, founder E.A. Stuart boosted milk yields while pioneering humane practices—his prize Holstein Segis Pietertje Prospect (“Possum Sweetheart”) produced 10x the era’s average. Carnation’s data-driven breeding and stress-reduction strategies predated modern welfare science, creating genetics that underpin 30% of North American herds. Their legacy—spanning corporate evolution into pet food giant Friskies—proves ethical farming and productivity aren’t mutually exclusive, offering lessons for today’s climate-smart dairies.
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