Posted by: | Christina, starme169@hotmail.com | Subject: | safe honey | When: | 11:20 PM, 27 Sep 2000 | IP: | 149.169.66.63 |
I would like to try the leadbetters recipie but my concern is with the honey. I seem to remember a breeder telling me to use only pasturized honey-because the unpasturized may contain botulism spores which can be fatal for your gliders. The mix says nothing about using pasturized honey. For those that use the mix do you use pasturized honey?
|
Posted by: | Ms. Shell, bhsinc@uswest.net | Subject: | I do | When: | 11:42 PM, 27 Sep 2000 | IP: | 216.160.232.45 |
I use pasturized only because thats all I ever buy my family. I too have read those reports.
Posted by: | chrissy, crisi13@aol.com | Subject: | none | When: | 12:44 AM, 28 Sep 2000 | IP: | 152.163.213.68 |
wow I have not heard that one, I put pure honey in my leadbeaters.?
Posted by: | Christina, starme169@hotmail.com | Subject: | none | When: | 10:56 PM, 28 Sep 2000 | IP: | 129.219.213.57 |
I did some research and pure unpasturized honey does have the potential to have botulism spores in it. That is why infants under the age of two and elderly sick people are never supposed to have unpasturized honey. Therefore, I suppose that if it is bad for a baby or the elderly it is probably bad for the gliders.
|
|