Liver is soft, nutritious, and easily available. Many babies who live in poorer countries who don't have exotic fruits eat it as their first food.
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I do not mind the discussion and I think the thread is more for all of us to blow off steamYes but as I said before, a human child should be weaned off milk and onto soft, nutritious, and easy to digest foods like banana, mango or other similar fruits. Not raw meat. And though dogs are omnivorous (Some breeds can eat an entirely plant based diet), wolves would most likely be eating meat as the main part of their diet, if not their entire diet. A baby can't live on that. Humans aren't carnivorous, we're just not physiologically suited to such a diet.(Nor psychologically, a child does not try to kill and eat a bird or mouse if it sees one.)
A wolf may try, but ultimately it would end in failure. It's an interesting topic though, I enjoy talking about these things. But perhaps this isn't the best place to discuss it. There must be a more suitable thread..?
fish is the main staple, seaweed is plentiful as is planktonAt the risk of beating a dead horse, Where did the Inuit Indians ( those living in the arctic areas) find bananas, and other soft fruit? We tend to think that all people must live and eat as we do.
Also, the eat a lot of wild berries...fish is the main staple, seaweed is plentiful as is plankton
Quote: speaking of the intuit they are set back any wild berries would have
to be stored taking at least 4 days there 4 back to collect so
not quite as high in the diet
No I'm saying babies can't live on raw meat.At the risk of beating a dead horse, Where did the Inuit Indians ( those living in the arctic areas) find bananas, and other soft fruit? We tend to think that all people must live and eat as we do.
Correct.Babies lived on milk until they were toddlers, then were given raw meat that was prechewed by the mothers, blood and chunks of blubber, etc. There are many cultures that do not have access to fruits and veggies like we do and meat, blood and milk are the staples of their diets, even the small children.
As for the Inuit folks....back when they were truly living off the land, they traveled to different parts of the coast in different seasons to glean what they could from the land and sea, including the berries. They didn't make a special trip just to pick berries, they just happened to be there to collect bird eggs, muscles, etc. during that season also.