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If you thought you'd heard every conceivable use for the
Internet, think again: there's a Web site in Italy which allows
you to adopt a sheep online. For €183 (A$300) a month,
you can log on, name your sheep, check how it's doing and
watch it graze (presumably via a sheep-cam). Why would you
want to? Well, European consumers are becoming more and more
anxious about where their foodstuffs are coming from, especially
about scrapie, the sheep equivalent of BSE or 'mad cow disease'.
Having your very own sheep guarantees that the cheese, wool
and even the droppings (garden fertiliser) that are delivered
each month are all wholesome and organic.
But whether clients will want the sheep converted to mutton
after a year of watching its progress, remains to be seen.
Manuela Cozzi, who owns the remote farm in Abruzzo where the
sheep live, said that his aim was "to give people in
the cities a new sense of faith in what we are doing".
He added that "clients will once again have direct contact
with the origins of what they eat". One of the first
clients to adopt a sheep was Alfonso Pecoraro Scanio, the
Italian agriculture minister (whose middle name means "shepherd"
in Italian), who said he hoped the Web site would restore
consumers' "confidence in the quality of produce".
(Europe Wire hopes readers are impressed that we managed to
get through this story without mentioning New Zealanders even
once.)
http://www.newswire.com.au/apcweb/news.nsf/HTML/AllHeadlines/38ACB372EEC255BBCA256995007BD4A4
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