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<blockquote data-quote="Highpoint" data-source="post: 1461455" data-attributes="member: 29255"><p><a href="http://cattletoday.com/archive/2017/October/CT3546.php" target="_blank">http://cattletoday.com/archive/2017/October/CT3546.php</a></p><p>I saw this report this morning and thought this is where the study of glycobiology comes into play. Earlier this year I started testing a product on the pasture called fulvic acid. I thought after reading the research it would have to have glycans to do all they say but called every lab I could hope would be able to test in the US and to date have found none. </p><p></p><p>Well I was given eight cows two of which were not suppose to have a calf which were going to sale at the right time and a bull who was suppose to be unable to breed since the vet said he was damaged. The other cows had their young and while working them before moving all of them sure enough both of the cows who had not produced in two years were expecting. Now I can't prove it was the fulvic soil admendment but if anyone on this board knows someone doing research on cattle using glycans I would love to hear from them. I also mixed the fulvic and sprayed on feed ect </p><p></p><p>You might ask what are they and who has done testing. Wake Forest Babtist university uses them to grow body parts seen on CBS special YouTube. Also the company I buy nutrients from sales them in a different form which would be way too expensive to feed to cattle. And no I am not sure this product has them but everything leads to the premise it does.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Highpoint, post: 1461455, member: 29255"] [url=http://cattletoday.com/archive/2017/October/CT3546.php]http://cattletoday.com/archive/2017/October/CT3546.php[/url] I saw this report this morning and thought this is where the study of glycobiology comes into play. Earlier this year I started testing a product on the pasture called fulvic acid. I thought after reading the research it would have to have glycans to do all they say but called every lab I could hope would be able to test in the US and to date have found none. Well I was given eight cows two of which were not suppose to have a calf which were going to sale at the right time and a bull who was suppose to be unable to breed since the vet said he was damaged. The other cows had their young and while working them before moving all of them sure enough both of the cows who had not produced in two years were expecting. Now I can't prove it was the fulvic soil admendment but if anyone on this board knows someone doing research on cattle using glycans I would love to hear from them. I also mixed the fulvic and sprayed on feed ect You might ask what are they and who has done testing. Wake Forest Babtist university uses them to grow body parts seen on CBS special YouTube. Also the company I buy nutrients from sales them in a different form which would be way too expensive to feed to cattle. And no I am not sure this product has them but everything leads to the premise it does. [/QUOTE]
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