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A teenage brother and sister from Sark who had hoped to restart the island's dairy have not been successful in their bid.
On June 4, we took a 45-minute bus ride to Westwold View Farms in Westwold, BC, which was established in 1983 by the ...
When Tammy Fritsch talks about her girls, she isn’t referring to girlfriends or daughters, she is talking about her cows. As the owner of Two Guernsey Girls Creamery in Freedom, she works alone ...
Cows from almost all of Guernsey's farms have been struck by a respiratory virus that has left them unable to eat. Bovine Respiratory Virus is common in the UK but has never been seen in Guernsey ...
Tammy Fritsch owns and operates Two Guernsey Girls Creamery in Freedom, specializing in A2 milk from Guernsey cows. Fritsch started the creamery to provide A2 milk for her lactose-intolerant ...
Two Sark teenagers are attempting to take on the running of the island’s dairy.
The sisters established Royal Guernsey Creamery, highlighting milk from their own cows to make European style cultured butter. Royal Guernsey Creamery was officially incorporated in 2019.
It’s the 95th anniversary of Elm Farm Ollie, the first cow to fly. Yes, that’s right. It was on Feb. 18, 1930 that a 1,000 pound red, orange, and white Guernsey cow from Missouri stepped foot ...
She and Mark are also promoting the beta casein protein content of their Guernsey milk. This contains only A2 beta caseins, said to be easier to digest than milk containing a mix of A1 and A2 beta ...
Bovine vets pointed out that Guernsey cows are medium-sized and fawn or red and white in colour. They produce an impressive 6,000 litres per cow per year. But Jersey cows are far more common.
Can you buy raw cow milk in Mississippi? Here's what you need to know about state law, ... Breeds include Ayrshire, Brown, Swiss, Guernsey and Jersey. More: What to know about bird flu in Mississippi.
By C. J. Black Submitted to Corner Post “Madam is out!” I hollered as I ran to the shed where Uncle Luke was working at his old workbench. “Little B, too!” Madam was a Guernsey milk cow ...