Configuration
Modify this module parameters
Delete this module
Modify the width of this module
Configuration
Modify this module parameters
Delete this module
Modify the width of this module

Supporting People & Cultures
When we buy fur we help to support some 60,000 aboriginal and other Canadians who live close to the land, in rural and remote regions. We all may care about nature, but most of now live in cities. Trappers are our “eyes and ears” on the land. Because they depend on nature, they have a direct interest in protecting it; often they are the first to sound the alarm when wildlife habitat is threatened by pollution or poorly planned development projects.


Configuration
Modify this module parameters
Delete this module
Modify the width of this module

Aboriginal (and many non-aboriginal) trappers hunt beaver and other fur animals for food. The fur provides important income in regions where alternative employment opportunities are often scarce. Any meat not eaten by trappers and their families is returned to the forest where it feeds other animals through the long, cold winter. Nothing is wasted.

Fur farming also helps to maintain rural communities, at a time when modern, highly efficient food production technologies are reducing farming populations in many regions.

Because the major fur auction companies are now owned by the fur farmers and trappers themselves, in both North America and Europe, producers receive full value for their furs. Prices are established by supply and demand as fur manufacturers and brokers from around the world compete for the limited supply of furs available each year.

Top 10 resaons
Configuration
Modify this module parameters
Delete this module
Modify the width of this module

 

Curious about how fur measures up to other

important ecological and social criteria?


Configuration
Modify this module parameters
Delete this module
Modify the width of this module
www.FurIsGreen.com
Copyright © Fur Council of Canada. All rights reserved. Website by Projet Bleu inc.