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Alan Gould 10-12-2002 05:59 AM

Cleaning fleece
 
In article , Mary Fisher
writes
We used to have cow heel stew during the war and meat rationing ...

And a broth of calf's-heel jelly was always considered to be beneficial
to people in convalescence. To return to topic, the same animal material
is also used to produce hoof and horn meal as used by some gardeners,
but I think that is ground up raw rather than boiled and rendered.
--
Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs.

DaveDay34 10-12-2002 06:19 PM

Cleaning fleece
 
I've heard that but have you ever tried chewing more than the edges of a
skin? I don't know how it was done ...

Mary


You fold the skin over!

Dave.

Mary Fisher 10-12-2002 06:30 PM

Cleaning fleece
 

"DaveDay34" wrote in message
...
I've heard that but have you ever tried chewing more than the edges of a
skin? I don't know how it was done ...

Mary


You fold the skin over!

Dave.


You really haven't tried it, have you?

:-)

Mary



Mary Fisher 10-12-2002 06:30 PM

Cleaning fleece
 

"Alan Gould" wrote in message
...
In article , Mary Fisher
writes
We used to have cow heel stew during the war and meat rationing ...

And a broth of calf's-heel jelly was always considered to be beneficial
to people in convalescence. To return to topic, the same animal material
is also used to produce hoof and horn meal as used by some gardeners,
but I think that is ground up raw rather than boiled and rendered.


Is it still allowed post BSE?

I'm serious ...

Mary
--
Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs.




Alan Gould 10-12-2002 08:02 PM

Cleaning fleece
 
In article , Mary Fisher
writes
And a broth of calf's-heel jelly was always considered to be beneficial
to people in convalescence. To return to topic, the same animal material
is also used to produce hoof and horn meal as used by some gardeners,
but I think that is ground up raw rather than boiled and rendered.


Is it still allowed post BSE?

AFAIK all BSE based restrictions have been lifted, so that would seem to
include h&h for gardening purposes, or presumably cow or calf-heel for
human consumption. Ox-tail is in much the same territory and that is
regularly seen on sale in butchers and supermarkets.

Animal based fertilisers other than dung and urine have always been
controversial in the organic gardening sense. Hoof & horn, bone meal,
dried blood, fish, blood and bone etc. are not recommended for regular
use in the (pre BSE) HDRA guidelines, but they have appeared in the
Chase/HDRA Organic Gardening Catalogue. At present it carries h&h and
bone meal, but not the others. Vegetarians and vegans prefer not to use
fertilisers made from animal parts, but they use their manure. We avoid
them on animal welfare grounds, but some organic gardeners use them.
--
Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs.

Mary Fisher 11-12-2002 06:49 PM

Cleaning fleece
 

"Alan Gould" wrote in message
...

Is it still allowed post BSE?

AFAIK all BSE based restrictions have been lifted, so that would seem to
include h&h for gardening purposes, or presumably cow or calf-heel for
human consumption. Ox-tail is in much the same territory and that is
regularly seen on sale in butchers and supermarkets.


I know but I thought I read somewhere that bone products for the garden were
verboten.

Animal based fertilisers other than dung and urine snip


We avoid
them on animal welfare grounds,


Why is that? hoof and horn and even blood are products of the
slaughterhouse, animals are slaughtered for food. I'm not challenging, just
asking.

Mary
--
Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs.




Alan Gould 12-12-2002 08:12 PM

Cleaning fleece
 
In article , Mary Fisher
writes

We avoid
them on animal welfare grounds,


Why is that? hoof and horn and even blood are products of the
slaughterhouse, animals are slaughtered for food. I'm not challenging, just
asking.

It goes back to our goat-keeping times. A lot of our goat milk went to
people with allergies to bovine produce. Health advisers pointed out
that some problems could arise from bovine animal blood or bone nasties
entering the food chain through the herbage and then into the milk. We
don't need to use that kind of fertiliser anyway because we have plenty
of organic compost - partly made from stable and farmyard manure!
--
Alan & Joan Gould - North Lincs.

DaveDay34 12-12-2002 09:26 PM

Cleaning fleece
 
You really haven't tried it, have you?

:-)

Mary


Mary, are you doubting the fact, or just amazed that that is how it's been done
for several thousand years by various people around the world?

Dave.

Mary Fisher 12-12-2002 09:35 PM

Cleaning fleece
 

"DaveDay34" wrote in message
...
You really haven't tried it, have you?

:-)

Mary


Mary, are you doubting the fact, or just amazed that that is how it's been

done
for several thousand years by various people around the world?


I'm doubting that you have tried it. I have, it is extremely difficult.

Mary

Dave.





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