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Sprout Into Better Health!
If I told you that you could grow your own superfood right in your kitchen and it took very little effort, would you do it?
The good news is you can.
Sprouting is easy, it’s low cost and can be completely organic. Not to mention it would be a great mini science experiment for your kids to be involved with.
When you sprout your are accessing nutrients that are otherwise hard to get.
If I told you that you could grow your own superfood right in your kitchen and it took very little effort, would you do it?
The good news is you can.
Sprouting is easy, it’s low cost and can be completely organic. Not to mention it would be a great mini science experiment for your kids to be involved with.
When you sprout your are accessing nutrients that are otherwise hard to get.
Most seeds and other plant resources are nutrient powerhouses however they contain anti-nutrients. Anti-nutrients are the plants natural defense mechanism that make it hard to digest (think beans the “magical fruit, the more you eat the more you…”). Naturally animals will not eat foods that upset their system.
It’s kind of like having a safe full of money but there is no way into the safe to get it! Not really harnessing the true potential!
To access the nutrients we have to find a way in, to open safe and break out the goods inside.
The way this can be done is by treating food before we eat it. The way we most commonly treat food is cooking with heat. But heat can also break down other compounds that would benefit us.
Although heat helps to access nutrients, there are better, easier options. These include but are not limited to soaking, sprouting and fermenting.
Sprouting involves soaking the seed and rinsing it with water for 2-5 days (depending on what your are sprouting) and let nature do the rest.
You will be left with a nutrient powerhouse that is highly bioavailable since this process decreases the anti-nutrients and other guy irritating compounds.
If you eat certain seeds, peas, beans that irritate your gut, sprouting them may be the answer to enjoy the benefits while not getting the irritations.
Personally speaking raw chickpeas can cause a lot of bloating and gut irritation for me but once sprouted they don’t.
Sprouting is so easy to do and something we should all be doing to improve our diets. Many other dietary improvements can have high barriers such as cost or accessibility. With sprouting these same barriers are very low as they are cheap, organic and easy to order online!
Hip Pain in Dogs - Can an Animal Chiropractor Help?
Hip dysfunction leads to hip pain. This is common in mid-large breed dogs. An animal chiropractor can have a profound effect on your dog’s hips and overall quality of life.
If you have a large breed dog you probably know that their hips can cause trouble. Whether it is severe hip dysplasia or osteoarthritis the hips can affect the health of the dog, their quality of life and the pocket book of the owner.
Whether it is a human or a dog the same principles of wear, tear and degeneration apply. The difference is when humans have a bad hip they don’t run, jump and play. Dogs on the other hand do.
I don’t know how many owners try to limit the dog’s exercise, but when the dog finds a squirrel in the backyard they get up and go, and make a youthful leap off the back deck causing impact to those bad joints. They come back limping and it stays this way for the following 3 days.
Week after week this pattern continues.
If you can’t correct the behaviour, how do we make the joints adapt to handle those repetitive stresses that are placed on it.
Motion is lotion.
Your dog needs movement. Or should I say your dog’s hips need movement. No just any movement, proper movement.
Dogs with hip issues, will get atrophy of the muscle from disuse and from a phenomenon called arthrogenic muscular inhibitiion.
Regular check ups from your animal chiropractor can be a game changer in the function of your dogs hip health. I have literally seen old dogs get a bounce back into their step.
When owners tell me their dog is now walking them and that hasn’t happened in years, I know the visit to the animal chiropractor was well worth it.
The bottom line is dogs don’t lie. The proof is in the pudding!