I find the approach to human nutrition (by your average person) so interesting compared to how we feed animals. There are programs out there that estimate the animal's need (based on age, use, season, etc...) and then you can "pre-select" feeds with averaged values, or enter in the known nutrition for your own hay/pasture/feed (the former two have entire companies devoted to determining their nutrition for ranchers and the like), as well as the cost the feed. The program can then calculate various feed regimes based on "most cost effective" or "highest roughage levels or "best balance". These programs also take into account how much the animal can (or should) eat per day in terms of percent body weight. This is particularly important for stabled animals like horses, or they develop nervous tics.
Really, looking at how well our pets and livestock are fed, it really explains why humans have so many issues
Really, looking at how well our pets and livestock are fed, it really explains why humans have so many issues

Yes, it is interesting to compare the two. I think a lot of the problem has to do with how "healthy" and "hot" are portrayed in the media. Please don't think I just blame the media either, I still think individual responsibility is key, but media does have a big psychological effect. I mean, it is pretty pitiful when magazines and films and so on promote diets that are horrible and can't possibly be sustained as producing that new "hot look" that so and so has. Honestly, for years one of the biggest examples of this media portrayal was Oprah Winfrey. It was only after years of yo-yo weight loss and gain that she finally realized the insanity of it all and came to the conclusion that if she just ate right and exercised to her ability that she was simply the size she is now and could finally stop the cycle - which btw I do not find her fat now at all but I always thought she looked ridiculous when she would lose drastic amounts of weight.
It is curious that more people would not think about tailoring their nutritional needs but it makes sense that when they get bombarded with a message regardless of whether ti is correct or incorrect that they adopt it as reality. That is the psychology major in me speaking - the media effect is real and it is powerful.
But wine was the great assassin of both tradition and propriety...
-Brandon Sanderson, The Way of Kings
-Brandon Sanderson, The Way of Kings
New gene test may help you pick your diet
- 04/03/2010 01:43:43 AM
256 Views
A bigger study would be more convincing....
- 04/03/2010 01:49:42 AM
152 Views
Re: A bigger study would be more convincing....
- 04/03/2010 04:43:41 AM
145 Views
As an Animal Science Major...
- 04/03/2010 04:51:18 AM
140 Views
Re: As an Animal Science Major...
- 05/03/2010 12:30:44 AM
126 Views
Re: A bigger study would be more convincing....
- 04/03/2010 07:35:12 AM
166 Views
actually, there IS a benefit to steel cut oats.
- 04/03/2010 03:19:57 PM
130 Views
I get you
- 04/03/2010 04:03:27 PM
128 Views
- 04/03/2010 04:03:27 PM
128 Views
Actually, you can buy less processed oatmeal for cheaper.
- 04/03/2010 04:12:47 PM
123 Views
All I do is buy a can of Quaker Oats Oats and add them to boiling water.
- 05/03/2010 12:54:14 AM
143 Views
Lol. No problem with ranting, I think we're pretty much on the same page.
- 05/03/2010 12:49:32 AM
127 Views
Yeah weight training is important
- 05/03/2010 01:22:09 AM
133 Views
