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Re: Corn gluten meal = herbicide

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Corn gluten meal is a pre-emergent which means it must be applied during the

time your specific weed or weeds are beginning to germinate in your local area.

It doesn't harm already established plants. Be careful not to apply it while

broadcasting grass or garden seeds because, AFAIK, it doesn't distinguish

between which seeds it affects. It is supposed to break down into a mild

fertilizer as long as you don't apply too much. Garrett in Dallas/FW

talks alot about corn gluten meal, but then he talks alot about some organic

issues in an almost metaphysical sense.

Darrell

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So gluten is poisonous to some living things...at least in some

stages of development...?

Hmmmm....

--- In , " Darrell " <lazlo75501@y...>

wrote:

> Corn gluten meal is a pre-emergent which means it must be applied

during the time your specific weed or weeds are beginning to

germinate in your local area. It doesn't harm already established

plants. Be careful not to apply it while broadcasting grass or

garden seeds because, AFAIK, it doesn't distinguish between which

seeds it affects. It is supposed to break down into a mild fertilizer

as long as you don't apply too much. Garrett in Dallas/FW

talks alot about corn gluten meal, but then he talks alot about some

organic issues in an almost metaphysical sense.

>

> Darrell

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> I've been thinking about the egg yolks turning color and the

> responses some folks have to meat, and am wondering if

> maybe corn and wheat gluten peptides DO get into the meat

> and yolks, and milk, which might account for why so many

> gluten intolerant folks can't take milk. Every scientist will

> tell you the protein does NOT get into milk or meat, but

> it's pretty well known that this happens in humans (at least

> some humans) because it shows up in breast milk and

> can make babies ill before they start eating bread.

>

> Hmmmm ...

>

>

> Heidi Jean

I've been wondering that, too. If you look into the conventional

explanation of mad cow disease, it says that prion proteins don't get

degraded during rendering and end up in animal feeds that contain

animals byproducts. The assumption is that they don't get degraded

in the next animal's digestive tract, too, I guess, and end up in the

brain. If that's so, that would make some proteins pretty persistent.

I'd like to know whether totally grassfed beef or milk would cause a

gluten-intolerant person to react, the same as grainfed beef or milk

might.

I'd also like to know if a person with proper intenstinal bacteria

and excellent digestion (adequate hydrocholoric acid, etc.) would

still leave some problem proteins undigested.

Do any listmembers know?

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> I've been wondering that, too. If you look into the conventional

> explanation of mad cow disease, it says that prion proteins don't

get

> degraded during rendering and end up in animal feeds that contain

> animals byproducts. The assumption is that they don't get degraded

> in the next animal's digestive tract, too, I guess, and end up in

the

> brain. If that's so, that would make some proteins pretty

persistent.

>

I just found something that says not all proteins get digested.

http://www.non-gm-farmers.com/news_details.asp?ID=1353

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