Английская Википедия:Harris Ranch

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Файл:HarrisRanchSign.jpg
A Harris Ranch sign in Coalinga, California, displaying the Harris Ranch logo similar to all Harris Ranch packaging
Файл:HarrisRanchResturant.jpg
Harris Ranch Restaurant

Harris Ranch, or the Harris Cattle Ranch, feedlot is California's largest beef producer, producing Шаблон:Convert of beef per year in 2010.[1] It is located alongside Interstate 5 at its intersection with State Route 198 east of Coalinga, in the San Joaquin Valley of central California. The ranch is owned by Harris Farms.[2]

Description

History

Founded by Jack Harris in 1937, the Harris Ranch Beef Company (now operated by Jack Harris' son John) was originally a cotton and grain operation.[1] In the 1970s the ranch opened a burger stand near Interstate 5.[3]

The farm also operates an inn and restaurant, raises fruit and vegetable crops, and breeds thoroughbred horses.[1][4] Overall, the operation has more than 400 employees.[5] Approximately Шаблон:Convert are devoted to garlic, broccoli, pomegranates, and tomatoes, among 35 types of fruits and vegetables.[6]

During the war on terror, volunteers from the San Joaquin Valley, especially Bakersfield, supplied with beef from Harris Ranch, have volunteered to serve steaks to service-members who are OCONUS.[7]

In January 2012, an arsonist destroyed fourteen cattle trucks on the ranch. The Animal Liberation Front claimed responsibility.[8][9]

Marketing and distribution

At over Шаблон:Convert and with a population of over 100,000 cattle,[6] and hundreds harvested daily, the ranch is the largest on the West Coast. It is also among the largest (when including density) in the United States. A vertically integrated operation, it owns a fleet of trucks that take cattle from several ranches with which it deals, and does its own finishing, slaughtering, and packaging.[1]

The ranch supplies the hamburger meat for the In-N-Out Burger chain, and also distributes beef and prepared meals through grocery stores and restaurants nationwide.[1][5]

Harris Ranch was one of the first to build a brand around itself as a specialty niche product, and is credited as a forerunner of companies like Niman Ranch and Dakota Beef.[1]

Restaurant and inn

The restaurant was targeted to local farmers when it opened in 1977, but later became popular as a halfway stop on the busy highway connecting San Francisco and Los Angeles.[10][11][12] A 153-room luxury inn was added in 1987.[6] It was built in hacienda-style.[11] The restaurant evolved into a "farm to fork" concept in the late 2000s, featuring not only beef but wine and other products made locally by the ranch.[1] As of 2008 the restaurant was the 57th busiest in the United States and sixth busiest in California based on gross receipts.[5] The site was chosen for a hydrogen vehicle fuel station as well as one of the first battery swapping Tesla stations.[13][14] Later, 18 superchargers were added. Then, in 2021 an expansion of 80 more V3 superchargers was planned for 2022, making it the world's largest supercharger location.[15]

Public reception

The ranch is known to travelers for the "ripe, tangy odor of cow manure", described alternately as a "horrible stench"[16] and "a good, honest, American smell".[17] This smell inspired food writer Michael Pollan to conduct the research on factory farming that led to his sustainability book, The Omnivore's Dilemma.[16] The owner of Harris Ranch, in turn, threatened to withhold a $500,000 donation to California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo if it sponsored a speech there by Pollan.[18] In reference to the large number of cattle processed at its facilities, some critics[19] have nicknamed the ranch "Cowschwitz",[16] comparing the slaughtering of cattle to the slaughtering of Jews during the Holocaust at the Auschwitz concentration camp.[6][20][21] Animal behavior expert Temple Grandin described the nickname as a matter of public misperception, saying that the company "does a great job" of keeping its animals.[22]

See also

Gallery

References

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External links

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