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Salmon Wars
Salmon Wars: The Dark Underbelly of Our Favorite Fish | Douglas Frantz, Catherine Collins
3 posts | 1 read | 3 to read
A Pulitzer Prize-winning correspondent and a former private investigator dive deep into the murky waters of the international salmon farming industry, exposing the unappetizing truth about a fish that is not as good for you as you have been told. A decade ago, farmed Atlantic salmon replaced tuna as the most popular fish on North Americas dinner tables. We are told salmon is healthy and environmentally friendly. The reality is disturbingly different. In Salmon Wars, investigative journalists Douglas Frantz and Catherine Collins bring readers to massive ocean feedlots where millions of salmon are crammed into parasite-plagued cages and fed a chemical-laced diet. The authors reveal the conditions inside hatcheries, where young salmon are treated like garbage, and at the farms that threaten our fragile coasts. They draw colorful portraits of characters, such as the big salmon farmer who poisoned his own backyard, the fly-fishing activist who risked everything to ban salmon farms in Puget Sound, and the American researcher driven out of Norway for raising the alarm about dangerous contaminants in the fish. Frantz and Collins document how the industrialization of Atlantic salmon threatens this keystone species, endangers our health and environment, and lines the pockets of our generation's version of Big Tobacco. And they show how it doesn't need to be this way. Just as Eric Schlossers Fast Food Nation forced a reckoning with the Big Mac, the vivid stories, scientific research, and high-stakes finance at the heart of Salmon Wars will inspire readers to make choices that protect our health and our planet.
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SamAnne
Salmon Wars: The Dark Underbelly of Our Favorite Fish | Douglas Frantz, Catherine Collins
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1. Fish feeder at salmon farm 17 yr. Don‘t eat farmed salmon to this day. Became a life long wild salmon advocate. Salmon farms do great harm to estuaries and spread disease to imperiled wild salmon. 2. Not ones I‘ve been paid for, other than the occasional stint as an assistant in commercial river trips. 3. Burned out spectacularly in an advocacy career. Climbing out of the ashes and balance is my main priority! @Eggs #wonderouswednesday

Eggs #3 Sorry to hear about the burnout-hope you get your mojo back🤗 7mo
TheBookHippie I hear ya!! 😵‍💫 7mo
SamAnne @Eggs @TheBookHippie no phoenix has risen from any pile of ashes yet, but I'm getting back into the groove. Thank you. 7mo
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JuniperWilde It is nice to hear more about your passion for wild salmon. I feel strongly about protecting them too. I have worked in that space (ie. protecting from mining, fish farms) for years. People are starting to wake up. 🐟 7mo
SamAnne @JuniperWilde thank you for your efforts!! ❤ ❤ I worked for more than 2 decades in efforts to remove the four lower Snake River dams in eastern WA, impacting salmon and steelhead in thousands of miles of habitat in Idaho, Oregon and Washington. I think it will happen. I hope it happens in time. 7mo
JuniperWilde @SamAnne 🙏🏻 your work will carry forward. It has to. In Canada (BC) they are going to force the farms on land. Salmon are such a cool creature. 7mo
AlaMich My cousin is the conservation director for the Skagit Land Trust and I‘ve heard a lot of stories about the kind of work you‘re talking about. Not necessarily salmon, but other types of projects. (edited) 7mo
SamAnne @AlaMich Salmon are certainly a totem species here in the PNW. A life giving fish. 7mo
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TracyReadsBooks
Salmon Wars: The Dark Underbelly of Our Favorite Fish | Douglas Frantz, Catherine Collins
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This book offers an eye-opening, sobering look at aquaculture generally & farm raised salmon more specifically. Whether discussing the ecological & environmental impacts of salmon farming, quality of the salmon, health implications for those who eat salmon, industry standards & regulations, sustainability, or, of course, the economics, this book reminds readers its important to know where your food comes from & exactly what you are eating.

SamAnne My first job was in a salmon farm. I try hard to never eat it. I spent more than 2 decades working on wild salmon restoration. Salmon farms do enormous damage to wild salmon runs. And sadly, restaurants continually misrepresent farmed as wild. If they say it is British Columbia salmon or Norwegian salmon, it‘s farm-raised, not wild. 2y
TracyReadsBooks @SamAnne Such an important, eye-opening book with deceptive marketing and labels that don‘t give consumers enough information something the authors discuss at length. The lack of oversight and clear disregard for consumers, the environment, & wild salmon is perhaps not surprising but definitely very disappointing. No salmon here either. 2y
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TracyReadsBooks
Salmon Wars: The Dark Underbelly of Our Favorite Fish | Douglas Frantz, Catherine Collins
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My nonfiction TBR is smaller than the fiction one but it‘s big enough I want to start making a dent in it. Starting the process with this one. I don‘t eat salmon (generally not a fan of fish) but if I did, this book might just change my mind based on what I‘ve read so far.