Guest guest Posted January 20, 2005 Report Share Posted January 20, 2005 --- [Dennis]I been looking at a few informative sites thru search. I'll check at Nebraska regarding their research. My 3.5 month old jersey calf likes ground barley including the hull with milk on it. She also eats kefir and alfalfa hay so might get the rumen re-established with the correct bacteria to produce CLA. I've been looking for a quantitative method to test our milk. We have an HPLC here where I work so might be able to test CLA here. I think we have the correct detector. I noticed in some research, lactating cows eating oil from plants raised the CLA content of the milk. In , " " <toyotaokiec@y...> wrote: > > When I was reading about the research, it sounded like they got high > levels of CLA in cows that were producing milk FAST and were eating > cracked soybeans. I can't remember how much processing was done to > the soybeans. > > I think the thing they found was that feed that provided lots of > linoleic acid to a cow that produces milk fast gives the most CLA. I > think they said that grass provides some, but soybeans provide more. > > So they were getting high CLA with Holsteins on cracked soybeans, I > think. > > IIRC, if researchers gave the cow any grain AT ALL, it reduced the > level of CLA in that cow's milk forever. I think it has to do with > the organisms in the rumen. If you give grain, then the grain- based > organisms overpopulate relative to the others. And the others are > the ones that produce the CLA. IMO, it sounded a lot like the > problem humans have when candida gets out of control. > > Brown Swiss were also significant producers of CLA. > > The more milkfat in the milk, the more CLA present. > > I believe the most prominent researcher was Dr. Tilak Dhilman. I > think he's at Utah. I think they also did significant research at a > center in Nebraska, too. > > > > > > > Dennis- > > > > >--- I wonder whether oats and barley would affect CLA as much due > to > > >hi fiber content of these hulled(hull is around each kernel when > > >ground and therefore livestock eat it with the grain)grains.For > > >humans to eat the oat and barley grain the hull must be removed > with > > >a dehuller.. > > > > I'm not sure I understand, but AFAIK they both dramatically affect > the CLA > > content of milkfat and tissue fat -- a lot more than fresh alfalfa > does, > > for example. > > > > > > > > - Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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