Nurse Milk

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There are three phases of breast milk. Each one is vital in nourishing your baby. Ask WIC breastfeeding staff any questions you have about changes in your milk.
This is the thick first milk your breasts make while you are pregnant and just after birth. Moms and doctors may refer to it as "liquid gold" for its deep yellow color and because it is so valuable for your baby. Colostrum is very rich in nutrients and has antibodies to protect your baby from infections. Colostrum also helps your baby's digestive system grow and work well.
Transitional milk comes when mature breast milk gradually replaces colostrum. You will make transitional milk from 2-5 days after delivery until up to 2 weeks after delivery. You may notice that your breasts become fuller and warmer and that your milk slowly changes to a bluish-white color. During this time, your breast milk changes to meet your baby's needs. Nursing often, removing milk well, and relieving engorgement will help with milk production.
About 10-15 days after birth, you start making mature milk. Like each phase of breast milk, it has all the nutrients your baby needs. The amount of fat in mature milk changes as you feed your baby. Let your baby empty your first breast before switching to the other breast during a feeding. This will help your baby get the right mix of nutrients at each feeding.
Breastfeeding gives babies a healthy start—and is good for moms, too.
Learn how milk is made, when to nurse, how long babies nurse, and more.
Talk about why you choose to breastfeed, and ask for your family’s support.
Many moms worry about low milk supply, even though most make exactly what baby needs.
Remember, help is available and there are solutions
These tips help you get a good latch—and know if you have one.
Get tips for talking with your employer about pumping at work
Know your rights to breastfeed in public and at work.
Planning to be apart from baby? Find tips for feeding baby with expressed milk.
New to milk expression? Here’s what you need to know before you get started.
Here are options for finding a breast pump at low cost.
Get tips and see how pumping can help solve your breastfeeding challenges.





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Nurse All ® Multi-Species Milk Replacer with Probiotics





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This milk replacer supplement is powered by Opti-Gut™ to support gut health and digestion. It’s easy to mix and contains proteins that support growth and development.
Opti-Gut is a blend of natural ingredients, including both contents of the yeast cell and probiotic bacteria. Together, these ingredients help control harmful bacteria and support the population of good bacteria in the digestive tract.
2.25 x 10 9 CFU/lb or 4.96 x 10 6 CFU/g
(Bacillus subtilis and Enterococcus faecium) Contains a source of live (viable), naturally occurring microorganisms. 
*Not recognized as an essential nutrient by the AAFCO Dog and Cat Food Nutrient Profiles. 
Dried Whey, Dried Whey Protein Concentrate, Dried Whey Product, Animal Fat and Coconut Oil (preserved with BHA and BHT), Dried Skimmed Milk, Lecithin, Dicalcium Phosphate, Calcium Carbonate, Hydrolyzed Yeast, Brewer's Dried Yeast, Citric Acid (preservative), L-Lysine Monohydrochloride, DL-Methionine, L-Taurine, Dried Bacillus subtilis Fermentation Product, Dried Enterococcus faecium Fermentation Product, Vitamin A Supplement, Vitamin D 3 Supplement, Vitamin E Supplement, Ascorbic Acid, Biotin, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride, Magnesium Oxide, Zinc Sulfate, Ferrous Sulfate, Copper Sulfate, Niacin Supplement, Manganese Sulfate, Calcium Pantothenate, Vitamin B 12 Supplement, Menadione Sodium Bisulfite Complex (source of Vitamin K activity), Thiamine Mononitrate, Riboflavin Supplement, Ethylenediamine Dihydroiodide, Folic Acid, Choline Chloride, Cobalt Sulfate, Selenium Yeast, Sodium Silico Aluminate, Mono and Diglycerides of Edible Fats or Oils, and Artificial Flavor.
Directions For Use : Using the enclosed scoop* (level full), add milk replacer powder to warm (110° Fahrenheit) water according to the table below and mix thoroughly. For best mixing, sprinkle powder onto the water and mix with a wire whisk. Always mix milk replacer solution as needed for immediate feeding.
When mixed with water, this milk replacer should be creamy white in color and have a pleasant, sweet aroma. Do not feed any milk replacer solution that is abnormal in appearance, color or aroma.
Scoops (Level Full) of Milk Replacer Powder
*The enclosed scoop (level full) holds about 1 oz milk replacer powder by weight. Periodically weigh a filled scoop to ensure accuracy.
Feeding: The table below shows typical amounts to feed based on age. Individual animals vary in their requirements and appetite. Adjust the feeding rate accordingly, being careful not to overfeed milk replacer.
General Care Recommendations : Feed colostrum the first day. Ensure that one colostrum feeding occurs within two hours of birth. If maternal colostrum is not available, use Manna Pro Colostrum Supplement. Maintain a regular feeding schedule. Provide fresh, clean water at all times. Work with your veterinarian to develop a comprehensive vaccination and health program. If you have questions about your feeding program, please contact Manna Pro at (800) 690-9908 or www.mannapro.com .
Knowledge from top experts in the field.
Posted by Brandon Back, Thu, May 17, 2018
How to Select a Milk Replacer for Your Baby Goats 
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There are few things as adorable as a bottle baby...a bottle baby calf, that is.
Posted by Dr. Shannon Baker, DVM, Tue, Feb 25, 2014

Guide to Adult Nursing Relationships

Home Guide to Adult Nursing Relationships
Why nurse? Adult nursing is incredibly intimate and loving, much more so than sex. It is hard to describe but there is simply no comparison to the deep, primal emotions generated within a nursing relationship. We have become emotionally and physically closer to each other then we ever imagined possible. If you become a nursing couple your nursing relationship will impact every aspect of your lives, from where and how much you work to how you schedule errands, vacations, and visits with family. Almost every decision you make will be judged by how it will affect your life together as a nursing couple.
Adult nursing is extremely intimate and loving but it also creates needs and obligations for each of you that are very real and serious. Physical discomfort and embarrassment may result if your obligations to each other are denied. Entering a nursing relationship together will create a high level of physical and emotional dependency between you that many people would be uncomfortable with, and therefore must not be taken lightly! Once you reach a certain response level, postponing your obligations to each other for a day or two is NOT an option! Adult nursing is not for every one. It means adjusting your daily lives to put your relationship with each other first, above all other relationships and obligations, and this is not an easy task in our fast-paced and complex society. It means physically offering yourselves to each other daily, within an intimate setting, with built in reprimands if you don’t! It means providing for each other’s day-to-day physical and emotional comfort in a very real and tangible way.
In some ways adult nursing sounds pretty horrible, doesn’t it? It really is not because the positive benefits of nursing together far outweigh the negative aspects, and the negatives are easy to avoid if you know how. One day you will realize that you would prefer to spend time together, alone with each other, rather than do almost anything else. Adult nursing is a lot like riding a bike. When you first try you fall, then one day you get your balance and you hardly ever fall again. Just remember a few simple tricks and together the two of you will become a successful nursing couple.
How do you, as a nursing couple, measure your success? If you read some of the posts on this site and others you might get the idea that success is ONLY achieved if a measurable quantity of milk is produced. To this end some people are using drugs and pumps and working overtime to reach their goal. This is fine if that is what you wish to do, but why work that hard if it is not necessary to be successful? It all depends on how you measure your success.
Remember, it is about commitment and intimacy, not about milk. If you are a nursing couple and you measure your success in intimacy and loving commitment to each other, then you can be successful without producing a single drop of milk. You can be committed to each other, have a closer & more intimate relationship with each other, and have a physical NEED for each other by nursing up to a state of partial lactation, rather than full lactation. This will give you most of the positive effects of nursing together without some of the negatives.
When my wife and I started nursing she was very concerned that she might leak. She is a businesswoman and didn’t want the possibility of embarrassment. I also work a lot of hours more than 30 miles from home, so nursing 3 or 4 times a day was not an option. Our social schedule varies too, and there are times when nursing twice a day is not practical for more than a few days. We decided that pumping was also undesirable because we are doing this for us, not for a pump! So with these realities in place what did we do? Our schedule dictated nursing only once or twice a day, depending on our activities. We made a lot of mistakes, but we learned a lot by trial and error.
We have found that it is relatively easy to reach a level of partial lactation and maintain that state. The primary requirement is REGULARITY over time. Together, you must pick a regular schedule you can stick to and stick to it like glue. Do not vary this schedule more than 10% and you will be pleasantly surprised with the results. Gauge her state of lactation by being aware of her physical responses.
Each of these items is a measure, or level, of her lactation response. Level 4 is a major milestone that demands a higher level of commitment from each of you. If she becomes physically uncomfortable if a nursing session is skipped, then he must be more readily available to her, and she to him, to maintain her comfort. At this time she will be unable to express milk on her own so she cannot relieve herself even if she tries. This, by itself, means that partial lactation is in some ways more demanding than full lactation. Level 8 is another milestone because it adds the possibility of embarrassment and inconvenience to your relationship and you must be even more committed to each other to keep your private life private.
Here are 10 lactation indicators in roughly the order they will occur:
If her response reaches level 10, then she is fully lactated and now has the option of expressing or pumping occasionally instead of nursing if she chooses. This will give you more flexibility and perhaps allow adding sessions to your schedule that you couldn’t support at lower levels because you could not be together every time she would need relief. Be careful! Skipping a session now will mean completely soaked clothing and could also contribute to very painful engorgement!
We now nurse once a day on a limited schedule so how are we doing? We are currently at level 6 but we were at level 4 for a long time. Level 4 is a good place to be. It gives you all of the closeness of adult nursing along with a physical need to be together. We could stay at level 4 forever and be happy together but recently we learned the tricks necessary to move up without working too hard. These tricks are simple and they work well, but you have to understand why they work for them to be useful.
Trick 1. Pick a schedule you can stick to and stick to it like glue! This is the single most important step to success on a limited schedule. Do not vary from this schedule more than 10%! If you nurse once a day that means 24 +/- 2.4 hours. So, if you nurse at 7:00 am then you must nurse again between the hours of 4:40 am and 9:20 am the next day. If you nurse twice a day that means 12 +/- 1.2 hours. So, if you nurse at 7:00 am then you must nurse again between the hours of 5:50 pm and 8:10 pm that night. You also must nurse 9 or 10 out of every 10 scheduled nursing sessions. If the schedule you are on cannot be maintained in this manner for at least 30 days then pick a new schedule and stick to it!
Trick 2 . Do nurse outside of the schedule if necessary for her comfort! She must be as comfortable as possible so if you miss a scheduled session and she becomes uncomfortable then nurse outside of the schedule as necessary for her comfort if you can. If you cannot she will probably bounce, meaning she will become engorged to the point where she will be too uncomfortable to be nursed for a few days until her breasts “turn off”. Her response will drop at least 2 levels and it might be a week or more before she can be nursed again. Bouncing is very discouraging and stressful for both of you.
Trick 3. Do NOT nurse outside of the schedule UNLESS it is necessary for her comfort! This is by far the hardest thing to do. The two of you lead busy lives and have established a schedule you can stick to. Suddenly you have a day or two alone together and add one or more sessions outside of the schedule. When you resume your regular schedule she becomes engorged and bounces because you cannot be together the additional time now that she needs it. This is one of the hard realities of adult nursing and it has happened to us many times. We have just recently identified the cause of this problem and are still learning about it. If she is partially lactating then she can acc
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