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Re: Fw: Pugh, New Bern, NC

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Welcome from the Kombucha list! is a fantastic kombucha guru for

any of you

who are interested! We are glad to have you here at Raw Dairy.

>

> Pugh

> labradors@e...

> New Bern, NC

>

> I'd really like to find a source of raw milk in my area. I believe it IS

allowed here, but I'm

new to the area and haven't found any yet.

>

> I'm a kefir maker, and I know of the advantages of raw milk from healthy

animals. I

believe that all our food is better as nature intended, raw, and complete with

LIVE enzymes

necessary for good health and easy digestion. I don't want to live in a

sterilized,

pasturized world, although I have to admit that I eat mostly cooked food, except

during

the summertime when I can harvest fresh veggies from my own garden. I know the

raw

theory, but don't live the practice!

>

> I live in Kingston, Ontario, Canada during the summer, where it is against the

law for

farmers to sell raw milk. If caught, they can be sent to jail and fined several

thousand

dollars! I actually live behind a dairy farm and I think it's a crying shame

that I have to buy

store-bought milk!

>

> When I lived in Vermont, I had friends who were dairy farmers, and I've used

fresh raw

milk, and it was wonderful and creamy (and that wasn't even organic as it came

from a

huge farm where the cows were kept inside all the time). I also found someone

with

goats in Kingston, who was able to sell me some raw goat milk (for my dogs).

Of course,

my dogs allowed me to use some of THEIR milk to make my kefir. I was a little

disappointed in the taste of the goat milk. It tasted a little better when I

asked her not to

pasturize it(!) but it still tasted goaty to me - maybe because she felt it

necessary to freeze

it. She did not keep a billy goat on the premises BTW, as I know that can

impart a goaty

flavour.....

>

> I'd love to be able to try my hand at making cheese some day.

>

> Looking forward to participating in the forum.

>

> Cheers,

> and the K9's

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--- Pugh,

The good fathers and mothers at the NC state

legislature have determined the us wayward children

should not be allowed to sell, or buy and therefore

drink, (Shudder, grimice in horror) raw milk from

humanely treated cows fed on grass. But the

pasteurized, homogonized, processed, injected,

detected, selected, adultrated milk from hormone

treated, gastronomically abused bovines who never see

dirt is just fine, thank you very much.

Us outlaws resort to labels like " RAW MILK, FOR PET

FOOD ONLY, NOT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION. "

I live about 130 miles west of NewBern. Good luck on

finding a source.

Bill Dunlap

Lightwood Gatepost Land and Cattle Co. Lakeview, NC

__________________________________________________

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Mornin', - hey, don't I know you from somewhere? ;)

Welcome.

At 09:03 AM 12/10/04 -0500, you wrote:

> Pugh

>labradors@...

>New Bern, NC

>

>I'd really like to find a source of raw milk in my area. I believe it IS

allowed here, but I'm new to the area and haven't found any yet.

>

>I'm a kefir maker, and I know of the advantages of raw milk from healthy

animals. I believe that all our food is better as nature intended, raw,

and complete with LIVE enzymes necessary for good health and easy

digestion. I don't want to live in a sterilized, pasturized world,

although I have to admit that I eat mostly cooked food, except during the

summertime when I can harvest fresh veggies from my own garden. I know the

raw theory, but don't live the practice!

>

>I live in Kingston, Ontario, Canada during the summer, where it is against

the law for farmers to sell raw milk. If caught, they can be sent to jail

and fined several thousand dollars! I actually live behind a dairy farm

and I think it's a crying shame that I have to buy store-bought milk!

>

>When I lived in Vermont, I had friends who were dairy farmers, and I've

used fresh raw milk, and it was wonderful and creamy (and that wasn't even

organic as it came from a huge farm where the cows were kept inside all the

time). I also found someone with goats in Kingston, who was able to sell

me some raw goat milk (for my dogs). Of course, my dogs allowed me to

use some of THEIR milk to make my kefir. I was a little disappointed in

the taste of the goat milk. It tasted a little better when I asked her

not to pasturize it(!) but it still tasted goaty to me - maybe because she

felt it necessary to freeze it. She did not keep a billy goat on the

premises BTW, as I know that can impart a goaty flavour.....

>

>I'd love to be able to try my hand at making cheese some day.

>

>Looking forward to participating in the forum.

>

>Cheers,

> and the K9's

>

MFJ

Putting it in our hands gives us so much hope. ~C. Masterjohn

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Hi Bill,

Thanks for setting me straight. Sounds as if NC is as bad as Ontario in

that regard then :-( Maybe I'll have to take a little trip out to

Lakeview some time, in order to buy some of your milk which is not fit for

human consumption {VBG} I'm sure that my dogs would love it - wink, wink,

say no more......... ;-)

and the K9's

> Us outlaws resort to labels like " RAW MILK, FOR PET

> FOOD ONLY, NOT FOR HUMAN CONSUMPTION. "

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