Do you have a source on this?

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Linoleic acid is the main omega 6 fatty acid in peanuts. It's better than seed oils, but not by much.

That doesn't imply that that passes through at the same ratio in chicken eggs

The data is convincing.

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Unlike ruminants, which have incredible fermentation based digestion, monogastric livestock have acid-based digestion which is ill suited for high linoleic acid diets.

Unfortunately, the linoleic acid passes through to us in their fat, both on the animal and in chicken eggs.

https://m.primal.net/NcQI.webp

Angel Acres did some good testing to illustrate exactly how omega 6 linoleic acid passes through to egg fat.

Just shows how broken the food system is even upstream of what is on your plate.

Yes.

Beef and other ruminants, at least, seem to be able to filter out most of the inflammatory feed contents by the time you eat their meat and fat.

That being said, pasture raised, grass fed ruminants are actually *anti* inflammatory.

The main lesson is that you need to avoid consuming seed oils AND second hand seed oils.

Where'd you get those images? I can't find them on their site.

I do admit. Animal meat scraps is good for chicken feed protein content. I bet bug based feed is more optimal. Would be interesting to get an analysis VS edible acres eggs.

The varieties of chickens we have today, which are selectively bred to trade off flavor/nutrition for mass/weight, require supplemental feed.

They can't survive off grazing alone. The book 'The Dorito Effect', which I highly recommend, has a very good history on this.

It's a good, as Angel Acres is, to attempt to reduce second hand linoleic acid in eggs by expirementing with different blends of supplemental feed.

Maybe older varieties of chickens can be reengineered this way, over time.

Firebrand Meats does the same thing with pork. We love their bacon and ground in my household.

https://firebrandmeats.com/

Wonder if I should test some of the pork from my pigs, we weren't feeding the pigs soy, instead it was distiller grains for the protein. Everyone has said the fat is the sweetest they've tasted.

you should

and i will just say that i literally can't eat anything fed with soy, i get so sick it's unbearable

i love eggs, haven't been able to find any to eat that don't give me a severe allergic reaction anywhere near me

and yeah, i have asked neighbours, and i've had offers but most of the time "they are'nt laying" is the situation so far, so, been eggless, idk how to express how unpleasant and distressing this is

i lived on eggs more than half my life, they are my life, my life has sucked since i stopped being able to eat them, and it's all about soy fucking feed, 100% that's the cause

soy, corn, peanut, and grains

shrinkflation is a b*

You should have heard these retarded pig farmers I talked to at the bar new years eve. They litterally were saying "there is a reason no one raised hogs anymore" yeah it's cuz you raise yours like an idiot and deserve the $1/pound you get. I sold my first crop for $3/lb HANGING WEIGHT which was basically just to break even to see how it all went and I sold out in a week.

There's just a lot of inbred townies in agriculture when traditionally farmers are supposed to be the people doing science and engineering on a daily basis.

Is this dude basically advocating for feeding wheat barley or rye

That looks really cool!

There'd be quite the demand for low pufa pork & chicken.

Would love to know what's in their "Low P" feed.

Been thinking for a while now that I might be able to grow enough starches to feed pigs most of their energy. Taro, cassava, sugar cane & banana grow really easily here but I don't want to have to live on them day to day.

Having a low P feed would make things more convenient.

I don't think chickens are worth the effort. I have seen someone do it with massive compost piles and a tractor though.

Pigs are incredible converters of excess plant calories into meat.

My aim is resilience from supply shocks as well as low pufa meat. This summer I should be able to take my Taro & Casava production up a notch. I'll soon see of it's enough to raise a few pigs, should be interesting.

If you check out edible acres chickens on YouTube, his setup is basically to take vegetable scraps, let the chickens pick through them, that composts in place, as he turns it, they eat the worms and bugs in the compost, then he gives them small amounts of organic grains from nearby farms.

I think that seems to be as close to a wild chicken diet. But I do think using chickens as garbage disposals for our food waste is the best use of that resource, meat scraps especially.