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SHEEP DAIRY NEWSSHEEP DAIRY NEWS – A Change in FormatFollowing the recent Annual General Meeting, BSDA Council were instructed to change the format and timing of Sheep Dairy News in order to provide a better, more cost-effective and time-sensitive publication. It is intended to continue giving the membership high quality, useful and pertinent information but by new and more streamlined methods. From 2005 we will be publishing regular newsletters throughout the year, with just one annual ‘Sheep Dairy News’ following the Annual General Meeting. This will carry a combination of reports from the AGM and Conference, together with articles relevant to the industry and the membership in particular, plus reports of other events throughout the BSDA’s year. It is intended that the newsletters will be published bi-monthly and will be able to serve a much more immediate purpose for those members who wish to advertise stock or items for sale, or wanted, and more up-to-date information relating to Farm Walks and other events throughout the year. These newsletters will, wherever possible, be emailed in order to save both office time and postage costs and will be available to members only. In order to ensure that this system works smoothly would all members please ensure that the office is informed of your current email address as soon as possible, if you have not already filled it in on your membership subscription form. For those members/non-members who subscribe to Sheep Dairy News other than a membership copy: Subscription to Sheep Dairy News for 2005 will be £10.00 (one annual copy), plus £2.00 post and packaging for Overseas posting, please note only members will receive the newsletters. The Journal of the British Sheep Dairying Association providing up to date information on all subjects connected with sheep dairying. It is published once a year and sent free to all members. Sheep Dairy News is the only journal in the English Language in the world devoted entirely to sheep dairying and related subjects. UK £4.00 including postage per copy Europe £5.00 per copy Airmail Inter-Continental £6.50 per copy Special Offer : 21 years of Sheep
Dairy News (63 issues) £160.00 including UK postage or £200.00 overseas.
Here are reprints of some recent articles. Rewards from High Risk BusinessA look at Stephen Fletchers 'Ram Hall Dairy' by David Stone. Reproduced from Sheep Farmer.MILKING MONEY FROM SHEEP - FACT OR MYTH?An in depth review of the costings of a Sheep Milking enterprise bt Anthony Hyde FRICS FBIACOSTEOPOROSIS AND SHEEP MILKSHEEP MILK, DO YOU REALLY KNOW ABOUT IT?A paper given by Professor George Haenlein at the BSDA AGM November 2000ALLEVIATING THE ALLERGIESA paper given by Leonard S. Girsh, M.D. Adjunct Professor, Univ. of Wisconsin, visiting Guest Professor at Oxford, at the BSDA AGM November 2001THE D-AMINO ACID CONTENT OF EWE’S MILK AND CERTAIN PRODUCTS OF EWE’S MILKby J. Csanádi, J. Fenyvessy and A. JávorAdjusting milk yield according to lactation numberby Yves M. Berger, Spooner Ag. Research Station, University of Wisconsin-Madison ymberger@wisc.eduOlivia Mills died on 21st September 2002 .OLIVIA MILLS 1928 – 2002One of the enduring facts about Sheep Milk is its high Calcium (Ca) content and the other fact is that because we are all living so much longer, many more of us are going to end up suffering from osteoporosis. Maybe this can be blamed on our youth, and certainly the next generation will have no one but themselves to blame if they suffer too. FACTS:Bone density is laid down during adolescence.
1997 Adequate intake of calcium per day
*sheep milk is too high in protein for babies and should only be given if professionally modified. However nursing mothers benefit greatly by drinking it. If less is absorbed per day: Contra indicated for Osteoporosis sufferers: A statistical study at Harvard University, USA has shown that young people who drink excess soda pop or cola type products are 5 times more likely to have bone fractures and end up with osteoporosis to ones that drink milk, or other drinks. Caffeine seems to be the culprit. It helps the kidneys excrete calcium from the diet. Must have Vitamin D to be able to absorb calcium, Vitamin D comes from sunshine. Sheep products have up to four times the amount of Vitamin D to cow milk, probably because they spend more time out of doors. Adequate calcium plus Vitamin D in conjunction with careful exercise can relieve pain and halt bone loss and so reduce the risk of future fractures. No need to take extra Vitamin D if some time each day is spent out of doors as the body collects and stores it. Exercise is essential, walking at at least 4 mph is needed to benefit bones, as is also skipping, playing games like tennis etc; swimming is good for your heart not your bones. Resting in bed helps to excrete calcium so is not recommended. Never too late to benefit from sheep milk. For a child it helps to develop bone density. In the very old, it will halt further bone loss that is due to calcium deficiency. Even if some has already been lost, stopping further loss is essential. Osteoporosis is becoming more common now because people live longer. However in the Balkans, people live to be well over 100 and are hale and hearty because they live on sheep milk yogurt, live out of doors a lot of the day and take lots of exercise. Bone density is laid down initially in adolescence, if you do not abuse your body after that by drinking the wrong things, smoking or drinking too much coffee or tea, and taking in a daily supply of sheep milk products it might last a lifetime EXCEPT stress denudes the body of calcium. STRESS starts the deterioration of your teeth, your nails, your hair and finally your
bones. The obvious source is milk, yogurt and cheese. This can be topped up by other sources like oily fish with bones (tinned salmon) and supplements. Even Antacid tablets can actually help Calcium carbonate is just a stage or two short of marble and not easily assimilated., only
about 4% can be absorbed, so you would have to chew up a awful lot of chalk to get the 1000mg
daily dose. Beware the often recommended high fibre diets and coffee breakfasts unless balanced with milk, especially sheep milk, as the phytates in bran as well as the caffeine in coffee or tea actually inhibits the absorption of calcium. Sheep milk and Yogurt is ideal over a breakfast cereal. Sheep milk is often described in Europe as "Coffee milk" because it goes so well with it. Lactose in milk actually stimulates the absorption of calcium It used to be said that it was not possible to absorb calcium after the age of 35 to 40. However this is now found to be no longer true and even at 70 years old plus, you should take in at least 1000mg /day of calcium to include 2-3 servings from the milk, yogurt and cheese group daily. Sheep Milk and milk products are the best source of calcium because the riboflavin (B2), phosphorus, potassium as well as Vitamins A and D are considerably higher in sheep milk than cow milk Notes.Sheep milk can provide 254% of daily requirement of an 800 mg/day requirement In Northern climes, e.g. UK, it is thought there is a less supply of sunlight and hence Vitamin D, while there is a high intake of protein and Phosphorus, so at least 50% more calcium is required daily unless you live an outdoor life. The human body contains about 1,200 g of calcium. This amount has to be maintained from the age of 20 onwards. There are times of rapid skittle growth (childhood and puberty) and then it settles down. But because it is always being excreted as well as used up, it has to be constantly replaced. Bone loss starts at about 50 years of age and proceeds at twice the rate in women as in men. Good sources of Vitamin D. Cod liver oil; herrings; mackerel; canned salmon; tuna; eggs, sheep milk. A minimum daily intake of 200 IU of Vitamin D is required. Trace elements like Selenium and Cobalt etc are always helpful in the absorption of calcium. Lactose is essential in the absorption of calcium. Some people think they are lactose intolerant, so some way round this must be found. As lactose is partly converted into lactic acid in yogurt, maybe that would be a safe way to take in lactose. Try sheep milk yogurt. Human milk has 7% of lactose in it, so often it is the giving up of milk drinking in childhood that causes lactose intolerance. The significance of milk as a source of dietary calcium in a western type diet cannot be
over emphasised. Sheep milk products are the perfect alternative for people who are allergic to cow or goat milk. They are very healthy with high, easily absorbed calcium and zinc with a Calcium/ Phosphorus ratio that is ideal for human health and well being.
(From Sheep Dairy News, Vol.17, No.2) with special attention to food Allergy (particularly milk) and their substitutes, by Leonard S. Girsh, M.D. Adjunct Professor, Univ. of Wisconsin, visiting Guest Professor at OxfordThis is an interim paper based on the televisual presentation at our Conference, which was prepared jointly by Dr Girsh and Dr Haenlein. Numerically the crude data used came mainly from two separate questionnaires collected from our own sheep's milk customers. A scientific paper giving a more exacting analysis is in preparation, a copy of which is promised for a later issue. A study of 206 individuals from the UK, 195 of whom were intolerant to cow's milk (11 were tolerant to cow's milk.) demonstrated the advantageous nature of using sheep's milk for treatment of food allergies and symptoms associated therewith. These individuals listed other offensive dairy products (containing cow's milk) such as custard, chocolate, yogurt, milk puddings, butter, cheese, cream and ice cream. Symptoms noted most frequently were diarrhea, nausea/vomiting, headache, irritability, stomach ache, bloating, skin rash, eczema, nasal congestion, migraine, hyperactivity (in childhood). Of the 206 participants in the study, tolerance of sheep's milk was near unanimous; 99% tolerating sheep's milk with 83% preferring it. Other probable milk substitutes, during the initial comparative trial period., gave responses of approximately 36%, leaving sheep's milk as the product most relied upon in this one year observation study. It is remarkable that the multiplicity and severity of allergic symptoms produced by cow's milk were relieved by the simplistic substitution of sheep's milk. Other time honoured comparative substitutes (during the initial trial period for each participant), were much less satisfactory, averaging 36%, (33% to 39%)
The presence (found in all mammalian milks) or absence (in all animal milk substitutes) of lactose did not appear to be a factor. Additionally, it should be noted that commercially produced reduced lactose milks are treated with enzymes such as lactase, and may have undergone modification of glycoproteins found in the milk when lactose is split off from the protein. Clinical symptoms typically seen with cow's milk allergy include 1 Colic to 3 months An example of the many patients I cared for - A patient was admitted to the emergency room, age 20, with asthma; upon rolling up his sleeves, eczema was observed in the bends of his arms, possible life time stigma of cow's milk allergy. With the stopping of milk and milk products the asthma was relieved. Another example - a group of 73 participants (in total of 206) all now on sheep's milk , showing improvement of symptoms, 35 reported almost instant improvement of symptoms and 26 reported a gradual improvement of symptoms. (incomplete answers were provided by 7 participants). Most common other offending foods (other than dairy which was 100%) were chocolate (79 of 133) wheat 37 of 133 and beef 30 of 133. Four breast feeding mothers noted the disappearance of their infant's colic, almost instantly, when the mothers discontinued ingestion of cow's milk and dairy products, and used sheep's milk as a substitute (emphasising how milk can be a vector for foreign proteins ingested by a lactating mother, either human or animal [e.g. cows]) I have also been able to alleviate symptoms associated with arthritis and joint pain by eliminating milk (cow's milk) and beef from the diet of the subject. This observation has been extended to other chronic arthritis patients (i.e. the elimination of cow's milk or beef from their diet). This observation demonstrates the therapeutic potential of this diet as a treatment modality for progressively severe arthritics. It might even include arthritis cases of such severity that joint replacement is being considered.
Detecting casual factors of dyslexia can be illustrated as follows: Two brothers whose parent, a teacher, noticed changes in behaviour after the ingestion of milk further noted changes in handwriting after the ingestion of milk or milk products. By daily charting of handwriting it was possible to note the deviation from diet correlating the behavioural changes and induced learning disabilities -one child became dyslexic and the other developed phonetic spelling (manifested in the reversal of the letter L to J and 9 to P and could not follow the lines on a page In conclusion we have found in this study that sheep's milk represents a significant breakthrough as a milk substitute in cow's milk allergy and intolerance, along with a high rate of acceptance. AcknowledgementsI would like to express my sincere appreciation and gratitude for the invaluable help of Dr. George Haenlein and the
following, who enabled me and who generously contributed of their time knowledge and effort, in the initiation and
completion of this UK-US cooperative study and its presentation on November 10/2001 (From Sheep Dairy News, Vol.18, No.3) Olivia Mills died on 21st September 2002 after several months fighting against cancer. Olivia was a person of great determination, but single minded she was not. Her interest in farming, local
history, medieval agriculture, horsemanship as well as sheep dairying and cheesemaking show the breadth of her
interests and expertise. Dr. Mary Holbrook | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||