Los Angeles Times

Turkeys take seat at the table

At Farm Sanctuary’s Thanksgivi­ng, turkeys sit at the head of the table — not on it.

- By Alejandra Reyes-Velarde alejandra.reyesvelar­de @latimes.com Twitter: @r_valejandra

Holiday feast treats rescued fowl as guests, not as main course.

Pumpkin pie, cranberry salad and butternut squash were all laid out on the table. But it wasn’t your typical Thanksgivi­ng dinner.

The guests of honor were a dozen gobbling turkeys, feasting to their heart’s content, cheered on by their human visitors from the sidelines.

The annual culinary celebratio­n at Farm Sanctuary in Acton puts turkeys at the head of the table, not on it, said Susie Coston, national shelter director at the farm, an organizati­on that rescues and cares for big birds and other farm animals.

The turkeys at Farm Sanctuary, which also has locations in Orland, Calif., and Watkins Glen, N.Y., live a long life, supported by Americans across the country who adopt, or sponsor, them for a $35 one-time fee.

The life of a typical turkey in the days leading up to Thanksgivi­ng is bleak, Coston said. Male turkeys often are taken to melting farms, where their semen is melted out of the birds and hens are artificial­ly inseminate­d in a separate facility.

Poults, or baby turkeys, are taken away in trays to be vaccinated, have their beaks trimmed and their toes clipped. They then are fattened up for three to six months and live in small facilities that prevent the turkeys from standing or even fully sleeping, Coston said.

Once the turkeys weigh more than 30 pounds, they are then put in short crates stacked high on trucks and taken to slaughterh­ouses.

But a lucky few are spared. Farm Sanctuary rescues those turkeys that occasional­ly fall off the trucks during transport or obtains the birds from a multitude of other sources, including families that domesticat­e the animals but are unable to properly care for them.

“Sometimes we get them from the turkey fairy,” Coston said. “Who knows who it is, but usually in October or November, we’ll get big boxes of turkeys that have been debeaked and detoed.”

For the turkeys that survive Thanksgivi­ng, life is much brighter at the sanctuary.

They eat well and receive necessary medication­s, most commonly for pain management associated with their weight, Coston said. They run around and gobble at the chickens with which they share a home. They flap their wings and run at full speed when their names are called.

Malia, who is relatively new to the farm, has quickly grown into the role of the flock’s leader. From her clipped toes and beak, the sanctuary staff can tell she was on her way to a slaughterh­ouse before being rescued, said Breezy Rondilone, a program coordinato­r.

Though she’s relatively shy around humans, Malia is inquisitiv­e and curious. She makes trilling noises toward other turkeys through a fence, an assertion of dominance, Rondilone said.

When Rondilone approached another turkey, Serena, the bird quickly came to her.

“Hi, how’s my best friend?” Rondilone cooed. “She’s like, ‘Love me, hug me.’ She’s the biggest love bug.”

As Rondilone knelt, Serena raised her beak to the woman’s face and got a “turkey massage” under her brown wings. The bird closed her eyes in relaxation.

Hombre, a bold, white turkey that was rescued after participat­ing in a traditiona­l Oaxacan wedding, fluffed his feathers, showing off to visitors who come his way.

Hombre was spared from having his wings damaged by the Oaxacan tradition in which the bride dances with the turkey by the wings and then eats it for dinner, Rondilone said. Instead, he was carried in a basket during the dance and brought to the farm afterward by the bride.

It can be expensive to raise a turkey, Coston said. Depending on the bird and its health, it can cost $150 to $2,000 a year to care for the animals. The Adopt a Turkey program helps pay for part of that cost as well as education and advocacy efforts.

One of the farm’s most loyal donors is Elke Boettcher, a 75-year-old retired teacher from Mission Viejo. Boettcher has sponsored turkeys for 15 years. This year, she is supporting Malia.

“Overnight, like a bolt of lightning, it just hit me,” she said. “I said, ‘What am I doing?’ These animals have to die for me. And overnight I decided I’m not going to contribute to this, and I stopped eating all kinds of meat.”

Though she doesn’t see the turkeys often, Boettcher said she gets a kick out of reading about their personalit­ies and receiving photograph­s and adoption certificat­es.

Thanksgivi­ng is a difficult time for Boettcher. She walks through the aisles of grocery stores and cries, she said, asking herself why there can’t be a cruelty-free holiday.

But adopting Malia and several other animals, including a goat and a pig, gives her inner peace.

“To me, it’s therapy,” she said.

Boettcher celebrated Thanksgivi­ng with her family Friday with a cruelty-free dinner that included vegetable stuffing, mashed potatoes and gravy, she said. Malia and other adopted turkeys showcased in framed photograph­s joined her dinner table.

 ?? Photograph­s by Maria Alejandra Cardona Los Angeles Times ?? A TURKEY at the Farm Sanctuary, where the fowl ate pumpkin pie, cranberry salad and butternut squash for a Thanksgivi­ng feast. Some turkeys come to the Acton farm with clipped toes and beaks, a sign that they were on their way to a slaughterh­ouse...
Photograph­s by Maria Alejandra Cardona Los Angeles Times A TURKEY at the Farm Sanctuary, where the fowl ate pumpkin pie, cranberry salad and butternut squash for a Thanksgivi­ng feast. Some turkeys come to the Acton farm with clipped toes and beaks, a sign that they were on their way to a slaughterh­ouse...
 ??  ?? THE REFUGE, which has other farm animals, accepts turkeys that fall from trucks or other sources, such as families unable to care for the domesticat­ed birds.
THE REFUGE, which has other farm animals, accepts turkeys that fall from trucks or other sources, such as families unable to care for the domesticat­ed birds.

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