The fate of the geese to produce feather coats

The geese were suffocated and broke their wings by cramming in cramped cages before going to the operating table to collect feathers to produce fur coats.

Animal rights protection organization PETA shares footage of workers at a company specializing in providing feathered fears and driving them into cramped cages before slaughtering, Long Room reported on November 8. . At least one goose is crushed to death and many are suffocated in the video shot at James Valley Colony farm in Manitoba, Canada.

After that, the group of workers grabbed the geese, trying to cram them into the cage as much as possible to prepare for the journey over 5 hours to the slaughterhouse. There, they tied the geese, hung them up high and slashed their necks in front of their fellow beings.

" It is not humane to trample and make the geese suffocate, grab their necks and stuff them into small cages that make them fearful and miserable for many hours. PETA is urging customers to refuse to buy products. Goose jackets are produced in this cruel way and anything stuffed with the feathers of abused birds , "said Elisa Allen, PETA's director.

According to PETA, geese are sometimes left in cages transported throughout the night without food or water and after long journeys, cages are filled with feces and hair falls. After slaughter, the bodies of many geese have prominent bruises and broken wings, resulting from being confined in cramped metal cages for a long time.

The James Valley Colony Farm in Manitoba, Canada, raises 130,000 geese each year and the Schiltz Foods facility in South Dakota, USA, is the largest goose slaughterhouse in North America. The James Valley Colony farm transporting geese to Schiltz for slaughtering and selling geese to Feather Industries in Toronto, a feather supplier for Canadian Goose fur goose.

James Valley Colony Farm said it will train staff to make sure animals are treated more humane when it comes to transport vehicles.