People used to put silver coins in milk bottles to keep them from spoiling fast. I have some colloidal silver. I think I may do an experiment to see how long a cup of milk with it and one without take to spoil.
Here's a better tip. Go to your local grocery store. Look at the plastic containers of milk and check the expiration date. Then look at paper cartons and their expiration date. It's a whole lot longer, because the cardboard blocks light. I bought a carton of milk, and the expiration date is sometime in early September! That's a big difference. It may be more expensive to buy milk in paper quarts rather than plastic gallons or half-gallons, but if you are slow in consuming milk, you will save money by not ever wasting milk again.
People used to put silver coins in milk bottles to keep them from spoiling fast. I have some colloidal silver. I think I may do an experiment to see how long a cup of milk with it and one without take to spoil.
Here's a better tip. Go to your local grocery store. Look at the plastic containers of milk and check the expiration date. Then look at paper cartons and their expiration date. It's a whole lot longer, because the cardboard blocks light. I bought a carton of milk, and the expiration date is sometime in early September! That's a big difference. It may be more expensive to buy milk in paper quarts rather than plastic gallons or half-gallons, but if you are slow in consuming milk, you will save money by not ever wasting milk again.
My coworker has a story about a guy he knows that took too much silver. Turned his skin blue permanently. He said he got the dosing wrong.
Yes, that's Agaria.