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Feeding Deer
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<blockquote data-quote="Darkthirty II" data-source="post: 345847" data-attributes="member: 4046"><p>I read where someone was not worried about a-tox in the field with standing corn. It still has it, there is no difference. Everyone here probally already knows that I am not too concerned with baiting, or killing off the herd.</p><p>WIth that said, if your interested in seeing how much aflatoxins are in the corn you are feeding, here is what you do:</p><p>Take a cup of corn and put into a blender and grind the corn for a few seconds.</p><p>Put ground corn under a black light, and the aflatoxins will sparkle or glow with a greenish color.</p><p>This is what we used when getting in fresh corn from farmers when I worked for the chicken company's. If we did see a-tox in the blacklight, then we did the scientific method to break it down into ppm. A small amount was ok (can't remember the exact ppm's), but if was more than that, then we rejected the load.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Darkthirty II, post: 345847, member: 4046"] I read where someone was not worried about a-tox in the field with standing corn. It still has it, there is no difference. Everyone here probally already knows that I am not too concerned with baiting, or killing off the herd. WIth that said, if your interested in seeing how much aflatoxins are in the corn you are feeding, here is what you do: Take a cup of corn and put into a blender and grind the corn for a few seconds. Put ground corn under a black light, and the aflatoxins will sparkle or glow with a greenish color. This is what we used when getting in fresh corn from farmers when I worked for the chicken company's. If we did see a-tox in the blacklight, then we did the scientific method to break it down into ppm. A small amount was ok (can't remember the exact ppm's), but if was more than that, then we rejected the load. [/QUOTE]
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