Oh, I made other dietary changes too. I used to eat a lot of colby cheese, and I took that out of my diet. Cheddar is a couple times a week on home made tacos/taco salad, not daily like the colby was.
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Full fat milk is actually healthier than skim milk. The process of milk defatting removes the fat, and all the fat soluble vitamins. So you basically drink a milk with less fat, but also deprived of vitamin A, D, E, and K and higher percentage of sugars.I know someone else who eats lots of oats, porridge usually, but they make their porridge with full fat milk.![]()
have you got a reference for that? It would make an interesting example of errors and their consequences.When the first study of cholesterol and heart problems was published, the graph was upside down
It sounds like your problem was giving them just a cereal feed with its very limited constituents to choose from. I suggest you read some of the pages prior if you are interested in the topic, else continue with your pellets and ignore this thread.Woah !
With the 140 pages so far this has certainly ‘pressed a few peoples buttons’
For my two penny’s worth. I don’t trust the hens to naturally eat a balanced diet with a cereal feed, they would always get rid of the corn first and then gradually and begrudgingly whittle it down until the linseed which was always thrown away.
I now feed them with pellets. In my opinion they now have no choice but to have a more balanced diet.
I didn't know Japanese knotweed had it.Resveratrol (found in grapes, pomegranate) breaks down the fibrin.