Monday, 28 November 2016
Is there a difference between Organic & Non-Organic Food?
Of course. Organic is stronger & better. Do your own experiments.
Some websites insist there is no difference in nutritional value between organic & non-organic. How can there be no difference?
Let's look at just 1 thing: Non-organic food are zapped (irradiated), so they won't grow during transport & purchase. Organic food are not zapped so you will see garlic, potatoes, onions sprouting after a few days sitting around.
You can keep non-organic potatoes for weeks & months without seeing any growth. Same with garlic. Non-organic apples don't rot in the fridge for weeks.
What this means is that when "zapped", these food will lose some of their chemical potency & nutritional value due to destruction or damage to their chemical or molecular structures.
Previously, I sprinkled finely chopped 1 large non-organic garlic clove into my aquarium. 1 large female guppy was infested with white spots. It worked as a cure but not completely & slow. Even after the next day, the fish still had plenty of white spots attached.
Yesterday, I saw either the same guppy or another large female again infested with white spots. Sprinkled 1 small organic clove of garlic, finely chopped into the tank. Today (next morning), the fish is cleared of the white spots & only just a tiny spot or two can still be seen on the fin. The fish is swimming well & normal.
The other fishes do not have white spots. The garlic has not affected them physically but their immune systems should have been boosted with the garlic chemicals in the water. Very potent garlic. Just 1 small clove.
Both times (non-organic & organic), the smell of garlic could be detected above the aquarium water. I have not changed the water. [Note: water must be changed next day. Infection is due to dirty water. Change 3/4 amount of water in the tank & make sure the new water is treated with anti-chlorine chemical that you can buy from a pet shop. My tank is 2ft or 60cm.].
Why did I think of sprinkling garlic into the tank? Garlic has natural anti-bacterial, anti-fungal, antibiotic properties. If it works for humans, it should work for fish.
White spots is a protozoan parasite (unicellular organism).
I thought the white spots was a fungus. So, I applied garlic. However, the garlic worked well, even against this protozoan parasite. Potent garlic indeed.
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