AF, please provide us with all the information on these fish so that we could at least have somewhere to start understanding the pictures. And also while it isn't really an issue could you confirm that Mrs Morton was in NE Calgary on Oct 26, 2011 as the label and her blog would suggest. Not for any reason more than I am very curious. Since she had those fish on Oct 26 2011 you would think that the results from the ISA tests she would have had done would be complete. Where are those? Or were the test not necessary because she already had her ducks all lined up already. Or the results didn't suit her position. Allot of questions. I'll bet we never get to know. Just another misinformation story to fill the gap until we get to see stanford go down. She's had this story since well into November why show us this now?
The address on the salmon label is the western H.O. address of Superstore. All Superstore products in western Canada probably use the same label. The actual product (13 salmon) were bought in Campbell river. I'm quite certain they are BC farmed fish as that is the whole point of her research. I have no information on whether she had them tested for ISA, and if she did, what the results were.
I've made no inferences as to the linkage of the salmon to the whole ISA thing as that topic is in another thread. Probably the take away for the OP is make sure you know what you are buying. Although the expiry date of that product was 5 days from the date that the product was purchased, the fish were not only well into a state of decomposition, but there was obviously other health issues with those fish that may been the reason that they were harvested and sent to market early. Hoping there would be better health inspection at source or on the store shelf is probably wishful thinking.
The article has been on the link provided since October 15th 2012.
I am surprised they still have their gills; conventional practice is to remove them because of blood decomposition and the direct connection to the circulatory system in the edible tissues. Price is also quite interesting, $1.99 per pound. That and the fact that they are 2 to 4 lb weight class suggests they come from one of the land based freshwater facilities, not conventional seapen farming.
I wasn't aware that Mainstream raised Atlantic salmon in land based farms in BC.... please provide a link. It's highly unlikely that Superstore would be importing Atlantic salmon when they have a distribution agreement with Mainstream and the farms are just outside of Campbell River. Perhaps the fish farm recognized that these fish were diseased and harvested them early. That could explain both the price and the small size.
Consumers in the Campbell river area should be thankful that Morton came along and bought them.