🎗️ We need your help to raise money for local American Legion Post 128! LEARN MORE, SHOP, & SUPPORT.

Find Your American Food Source

written by

Anonymous

posted on

September 13, 2025

flag-farm.jpg


Protect your land, your community, and your family’s food

Coot Salute:
To the folks who believe America ought to feed America first — this one’s for you.

Howdy Friend,

You’ve probably noticed it too: the way we get our food is changing, and not always for the better. Supermarket shelves full of mystery meat, “Product of USA” labels that don’t mean a darn thing, and family farms selling out because they can’t keep up with big corporations.

Even the feed our livestock eats is American-sourced and top-notch — the best of the best — because good food starts long before it hits your plate. (We’ll dive into that in another newsletter.)

If we don’t wake up, we’re going to lose not just our food, but the very ground it comes from. That’s why now — right now — is the time to find your American food source. 

Every time a family farm goes under, that land doesn’t just sit there waiting for the next cowboy. Nine times out of ten, it gets bought up by a giant corporation — and plenty of those aren’t even American-owned. That means foreign companies end up holding American soil, and once that happens, good luck getting it back. Supporting your local farmer isn’t just about food — it’s about protecting the land beneath your boots.

At 2 Coots Ranch, we raise real American food the way it was meant to be raised: on our own soil, with no shortcuts and no foreign fingerprints in the process. Beef, chicken, turkey, and eggs — all honest, all local, all raised by folks you know.

So here’s the deal: if you care about protecting the land, keeping your community strong, securing your family’s food, and eating food that actually tastes like food… then it’s time to back your local rancher.

👉 Stock your freezer and pantry from 2 Coots Ranch today.
Because America ought to feed Americans first — and we’re here to make sure it does.

And here’s the ultimate in food security: a freezer full of beef from your local rancher. When the world gets shaky, you won’t just survive — you’ll thrive.

👉 Buy your bulk beef today and lock in peace of mind for your family.

Stay fed, stay free,
Phil

More from the blog

That fancy "antibiotic-free" label? It's sad. Doesn't mean what you think.

What "Antibiotic-Free" Actually Means (And Why It Drives Us Crazy) You see "antibiotic-free" on grocery store meat and think it's clean. Here's what that label actually means: ❌ Not that the animal never got antibiotics ✅ Just that antibiotics cleared their system before slaughter They can pump animals full of antibiotics their entire lives. As long as it's out of their system at processing, they can slap on that "antibiotic-free" label. How long does it take antibiotics to clear? Beef cattle: 7-28 days depending on the drug Pork: 3-21 days Chicken: 1-5 days Turkey: 3-7 days So a chicken that lived 42 days can get antibiotics for 37+ days and still be labeled "antibiotic-free." A steer that lived 18 months can get antibiotics for 17+ months and qualify for the same label. This kind of labeling drives us crazy. The deception in the food world is insane. Once you know this stuff, you can't unknow it. This is exactly why we got into ranching in the first place. We wanted to do things the right way, not the easy way or the cheap way. When you realize how much the food industry misleads people, you either get depressed or you do something about it. We chose to do something about it. Which Meat Actually Uses the Most Antibiotics? Here's where the deception gets really calculated. Pop quiz: Which meat is covered in "antibiotic-free" labels everywhere you shop? And which meat actually uses the most antibiotics? If you guessed the answers are completely opposite, you're right. Most "antibiotic-free" labels: Chicken wins by a landslide. Major companies like Perdue, Tyson, and Bell & Evans plaster "no antibiotics" claims all over their packages. Restaurant chains like McDonald's, KFC, Taco Bell, Wendy's, Chick-fil-A, and Subway all have "no antibiotics" policies specifically for their chicken (but conveniently, not for other meats). Most actual antibiotic use: Here's the reality according to the latest FDA data from 2023: Pork (swine): 44% of all medically important antibiotic sales Beef (cattle): 41% of all medically important antibiotic sales Turkey: 10% of all medically important antibiotic sales Chicken: 2% of all medically important antibiotic sales When you adjust for the size of the animals, it gets even more ridiculous: Pigs: 172 mg of antibiotics per kg of meat produced Chickens: 148 mg per kg Cattle: 45 mg per kg (the lowest) Translation: Pork uses nearly 4x more antibiotics per pound than beef. Chicken gets 3x more than beef. Yet chicken is the one with "antibiotic-free" stickers everywhere. Why? Because chicken is the easiest meat to fake "antibiotic-free" labels on. Remember those withdrawal times? Chicken: 1-5 days. Pork and beef: 3-28 days. The chicken industry figured this out years ago. Since 2017, chicken producers have reduced antibiotic sales by 45% and made a huge marketing push around being "clean." Meanwhile, the industries using the most antibiotics just stayed quiet: Cattle antibiotic sales have actually increased 7.8% since 2017 Swine antibiotic sales have increased 32.6% since 2017 Pork and beef companies know their withdrawal times make the deception harder. So instead of cleaning up their act, they just don't advertise about antibiotics at all. They let chicken take all the "clean" marketing space while they quietly use more drugs than ever. It's brilliant, and it's disgusting. Not All "Antibiotic-Free" Cuts Are Created Equal Here's another layer of the deception that'll blow your mind: even within the same "antibiotic-free" animal, different cuts have vastly different antibiotic residue levels. The research is shocking. Organs like liver and kidney have significantly higher antibiotic residues than muscle meat. But even within muscle cuts, there are huge differences. Studies found that chicken breast often has MORE antibiotic residues than thigh meat. That's right - the "clean" white meat people prefer actually concentrates more drugs than dark meat in many cases. And wings? They're even worse than breast meat. Different muscle groups in the same cow can have 4x different residue levels. The rear leg muscles accumulate way more antibiotics than front leg muscles or the diaphragm. Fattier cuts hold onto drug residues longer. More vascular cuts get higher drug concentrations. Here's How "Antibiotic-Free" Cuts Actually Rank: HIGHEST RISK: Liver (always the worst) Kidney Fat & Skin HIGH RISK: Wings Chicken Breast (often) MEDIUM RISK: Beef rear muscles Chicken/Turkey thighs Other organs LOWER RISK: Front leg muscles Lean muscle cuts Beef diaphragm The industry knows this. Federal regulations don't specify which muscle tissue to test for residues. So they can test the clean thigh meat, pass the test, then put "antibiotic-free" labels on the wings and breast meat that would have failed. At 2 Coots, every cut on that list = zero antibiotics. We don't rank cuts by residue risk because we never use drugs. Period. Why Conventional Farms Need So Many Antibiotics Intensive livestock consumes four times the amount of antibiotics compared to livestock raised outdoors. Here's the simple truth: When you cram thousands of animals together indoors, disease spreads fast. The air is toxic. The stress is constant. Animals get sick constantly. So instead of giving animals space and natural living conditions, factory farms just dose them with drugs constantly. It's cheaper to use antibiotics than to actually care for animals properly. The sickest part? They don't even wait for animals to get sick. They just pump them full of drugs preemptively because they know the conditions are so bad that disease is inevitable. At 2 Coots, we don't need antibiotics. Our animals live outside with plenty of room to roam as much as the weather allows. Fresh air, sunshine, natural behavior. When animals live naturally, disease isn't really a worry. Zero antibiotics. Ever. Not for growth. Not for prevention. Not even if it would be easier. If an animal gets sick and needs treatment? That meat doesn't enter our food supply. Period. Why This Is Really Bad: The Superbug Crisis Here's why this matters beyond just marketing deception. By 2001, more than 70% of antibiotics consumed in the US were given to food animals, not sick people. Those antibiotics don't just disappear. They create antibiotic-resistant bacteria: superbugs that can kill people. The numbers are staggering: 35,000+ Americans die annually from antibiotic-resistant infections 73% of antibiotics in the US go to farm animals These superbugs spread through food, environment, and direct contact When you pump animals full of antibiotics for months, bacteria evolve to survive those drugs. Then those resistant bacteria spread to humans through the food chain. When you get infected with one of these superbugs, the antibiotics doctors use to save lives suddenly don't work. This isn't theoretical. People are dying right now because of antibiotic overuse in factory farming. Every time you buy meat from animals that lived on antibiotics, you're contributing to a system that's creating untreatable infections. Imagine going to the hospital with a serious infection and having doctors tell you, "Sorry, the antibiotics don't work anymore because of factory farming." That's not a future scenario. That's happening today. Now You Know Better The meat industry is counting on you not knowing about withdrawal times and labeling loopholes. They're banking on "antibiotic-free" stickers being enough to fool you. Now you know better. Stop falling for "antibiotic-free" marketing. Instead, ask better questions: How were these animals raised? Indoors in confinement or outside on pasture? What's their policy on sick animals? Do they sell treated animals as "antibiotic-free" after withdrawal, or do they remove them completely? Can you visit the farm? If they won't show you how animals live, that tells you everything. When you buy from 2 Coots Ranch, you're not just getting meat from animals that never saw antibiotics. You're supporting farming practices that don't create superbugs in the first place. That's the difference between "antibiotic-free" labels and actually raising animals right. Your health, your family's health, and public health depend on supporting farmers who do things right instead of farmers who just label things right. The choice is yours. But now you can make it with your eyes wide open. When you see that "antibiotic-free" label at the grocery store, remember: it doesn't mean what you think it means. Questions about how we raise our animals? Contact us or call us at 731-207-0595. We're always happy to talk about our practices, because we love what we do and have nothing to hide. ----- References What 'No Antibiotics' Claims Really Mean - Consumer ReportsLarge amounts of antibiotics are used in livestock, but several countries have shown this doesn't have to be the case - Our World in DataAntibiotic use in livestock - WikipediaFDA report shows small decline in sales of antibiotics for food-producing animals | CIDRAPGlobal trends in antimicrobial use in food animals | PNASA Review of the Effectiveness of Current US Policies on Antimicrobial Use in Meat and Poultry Production - PMCScreening of Antibiotic Residues in Poultry Liver, Kidney and Muscle in Khartoum State, SudanEvaluation of Antibiotics Residues in Milk and Meat Using Different Analytical Methods - PMCDrug Residues and Microbial Contamination in Food: Monitoring and Enforcement - The Use of Drugs in Food Animals - NCBI BookshelfPresence of antibiotic residues in chicken muscle and liver (N=160).... | Download Scientific DiagramAssessment of antibiotic residues in chicken meat - PMCMore Antibiotics in White Meat or Dark Meat? | NutritionFacts.orgConcentrations of antibiotic residues vary between different edible muscle tissues in poultry - PubMedAntibiotic residues correlate with antibiotic resistance of Salmonella typhimurium isolated from edible chicken meat | Scientific ReportsAssessing antibiotic residue presence in Turkey meat: insights from a four-box method analysis - PMCEvaluation of Antibiotic Residues in Raw Meat Using Different Analytical Methods - PMC