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SRB, RBO and other horse food

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SRB: Stabilized Rice Bran; RBO " Rice Bran Oil

Because of the discussions here, I went to my closest Tractor Supply Store,

Monday, and bought a 40 pound bag of " Max-E-Glo " SRB for $25 (tax included),

a gallon of " Dumor " RBO for $28, and while I was at it, knowing that I

needed more vegetable matter in my diet, (I dislike many vegetables and do

not digest many of them well) I bought a 40 pound bag of alfalfa pellets for

$11 and a 40 pound bag of beet pulp pellets for $13.

The SRB is very tasty and goes great with a little apple juice. It does have

to be chewed and a little AJ helps a lot. By Tuesday I could tell a real

lift in my energy, so much so that I really tired myself out by Tuesday

night. This is significant because I was recently injured and while I have

recovered well, all the other things I've done for it and long term for my

health were not enough to lift my energy back up above the level needed for

healing. The SRB did it.

The RBO is very light and practically tasteless. I have fried a couple of

grass fed burgers in it; the wife likes it but I prefer VCO for that.

The big surprise is the alfalfa and beet pellets. They have to be ground to

a powder and my Vita-Mix does it well. A couple of spoonfuls of it a day,

mixed 50/50, immediately (7 hours!) resulted in bulked-up and more often

elimination with absolutely zero digestive issues and no irritation upon

elimination. I really needed that. I am bad for getting plugged pipes.

This has been a pleasant and profitable endeavor. Such supplements sold for

human consumption are beyond my financial reach now since my biz has

imploded in the last 4 years.

When my wife came home and saw the bags, she said " Honey, I know things are

tough but I don't want to eat horse food " , but she's already changed her

mind.

DaddyBob

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I'd be a bit cautious with horse feed. Probably loaded down with GMOs.

Alobar

On Wed, Feb 16, 2011 at 8:12 AM, <ransley@...> wrote:

> SRB: Stabilized Rice Bran; RBO " Rice Bran Oil

>

> Because of the discussions here, I went to my closest Tractor Supply Store,

> Monday, and bought a 40 pound bag of " Max-E-Glo " SRB for $25 (tax included),

> a gallon of " Dumor " RBO for $28, and while I was at it, knowing that I

> needed more vegetable matter in my diet, (I dislike many vegetables and do

> not digest many of them well) I bought a 40 pound bag of alfalfa pellets for

> $11 and a 40 pound bag of beet pulp pellets for $13.

>

> The SRB is very tasty and goes great with a little apple juice. It does have

> to be chewed and a little AJ helps a lot. By Tuesday I could tell a real

> lift in my energy, so much so that I really tired myself out by Tuesday

> night. This is significant because I was recently injured and while I have

> recovered well, all the other things I've done for it and long term for my

> health were not enough to lift my energy back up above the level needed for

> healing. The SRB did it.

>

> The RBO is very light and practically tasteless. I have fried a couple of

> grass fed burgers in it; the wife likes it but I prefer VCO for that.

>

> The big surprise is the alfalfa and beet pellets. They have to be ground to

> a powder and my Vita-Mix does it well. A couple of spoonfuls of it a day,

> mixed 50/50, immediately (7 hours!) resulted in bulked-up and more often

> elimination with absolutely zero digestive issues and no irritation upon

> elimination. I really needed that. I am bad for getting plugged pipes.

>

> This has been a pleasant and profitable endeavor. Such supplements sold for

> human consumption are beyond my financial reach now since my biz has

> imploded in the last 4 years.

>

> When my wife came home and saw the bags, she said " Honey, I know things are

> tough but I don't want to eat horse food " , but she's already changed her

> mind.

>

> DaddyBob

>

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In the USA, no GMO rice is approved for consumption or propagation. The feed

brands we have discussed are milled from USA rice.

Some GMO cross-contamination existed in the USA in 2009 and continual testing is

in effect to ensure the USA's GMO-free status on rice is maintained.

The GMO sugar beets and alfalfa have only just now been OKd for this years

planting so the beet pulp and alfalfa pellets will still be OK for awhile, and

we will be able to identify the more desireable products as time goes on as we

did with the rice bran.

GMO subjects make me think twice about that can of creamed corn in the cupboard

tho'; it's probably from the USA. " Monsanto's GMO Corn Linked To Organ Failure,

Study Reveals 12 Jan 2010 ... In a study released by the International Journal

of Biological Sciences... "

all good,

Duncan

>

> I'd be a bit cautious with horse feed. Probably loaded down with GMOs.

>

> Alobar

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