Kathy wrote: "It shouldn't surprise anybody here that humans are, in general, magnesium deficient also. If you want to feel better, I recommend taking magnesium citrate at bedtime (not at the same time as your other vitamins/pharma pills).
Animals turn on and off genetics with what they eat (including humans). In some ways, by drastically altering diets away from what is naturally available in the grazing environment during summer, we are creating newborns with a different dietary requirement than their dams.
There is truly some benefit in baling up weeds, or weedy cereal crops for the cows, as the weeds can sometimes provide better mineral content than the hay/crop. Our fixation with clean fields and monoculture crops/feed is smoke and mirrors when it comes to balanced diets."
Kathy, I thought this was a very good post. I agree with all of it, and wanted to add something that everyone seems to overlook - all of this talk of defficiencies and balanced diets relates directly to 1 place - the soil. Every year we spend millions as agr. producers on top ups for our livestock when they run low on anything from trace minerals to energy and protein.
Why is it so difficult to look at improving the soil first? An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Healthy well mineralized soils provide forages and crops with all they require to be healthy, and they in turn feed the livestock and people with all they require.
Instead of Cal-Mag in a bottle, try Ca on the soil. Google GSR Calcium.
Instead of high copper/selenium minerals try copper sulfate on the soil or a whole range of other things that kick start the soil towards being healthy again. Anyone can do it, it just takes a little dedication in switching your focus from cures to prevention.
Animals turn on and off genetics with what they eat (including humans). In some ways, by drastically altering diets away from what is naturally available in the grazing environment during summer, we are creating newborns with a different dietary requirement than their dams.
There is truly some benefit in baling up weeds, or weedy cereal crops for the cows, as the weeds can sometimes provide better mineral content than the hay/crop. Our fixation with clean fields and monoculture crops/feed is smoke and mirrors when it comes to balanced diets."
Kathy, I thought this was a very good post. I agree with all of it, and wanted to add something that everyone seems to overlook - all of this talk of defficiencies and balanced diets relates directly to 1 place - the soil. Every year we spend millions as agr. producers on top ups for our livestock when they run low on anything from trace minerals to energy and protein.
Why is it so difficult to look at improving the soil first? An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure. Healthy well mineralized soils provide forages and crops with all they require to be healthy, and they in turn feed the livestock and people with all they require.
Instead of Cal-Mag in a bottle, try Ca on the soil. Google GSR Calcium.
Instead of high copper/selenium minerals try copper sulfate on the soil or a whole range of other things that kick start the soil towards being healthy again. Anyone can do it, it just takes a little dedication in switching your focus from cures to prevention.
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