Horse Milk, A Gift From Heaven
by
Hubert Peffer
published in The Draft Horse
Journal, Spring 2002
Though the drug Premarin, made from the
urine of pregnant mares, is a very common prescription drug
in Europe against osteoporosis, few people know that this
is a horse-related product. Most have simply never heard
about pregnant mare urine (PMU) as there is no processing
plant and nobody is collecting pregnant mare urine on the
European side of the Atlantic.
On the other hand, another horse product, this one from
lactating mares, is actually a best seller...horse milk!
Fermented, horse milk (3-8% alcohol) has been the national
beverage in Mongolia since time immemorial. Until WW I, it
was a common sight in Europe to see door-to-door street vendors
vying for sales of donkey milk, directly from the producer
(a jennet that was milked on-site) to consumer (mostly babies
with gastrointestinal problems). Even now, the very prominent
Italian Journal of Gastro-Intestinal Medicine strongly recommends
donkey milk for babies with such problems!
Belgium, approximately the size of Maryland and origin of
the Brabant draft horse, specializes in horse (and a few
donkey) milk dairy farms, most of them situated in the Flemish/Dutch
speaking part. This is also where 60% of the nearly 10,000,000
inhabitants of this small European country live. They are
situated between their big neighbors of France, Germany and
the Netherlands. With a mostly rich alluvial soil and a mild
climate, heavy horses have always felt right at home in Belgium.
After a serious decline in registrations during the 1990s,
the Brabant Horse studbook is doing much better today with
approximately 1,000 registrations a year. At least part of
the credit for their revival belongs to the horse milk business.
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Vacuum milking itself also takes about a minute per
mare. Overall production for one mare is 1.3 gallons
a day. |
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Manually stimulating the mare, which is absolutely
necessary, takes approximately one minute. As soon as
milk is dripping, the vacuum pump takes over the milking
process. |
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Hard working and proud of the results, Frans and Nadine
de Brabander in the dairy house. |
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Fresh milk, filtered immediately goes into the milk
cooler. |
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During draft horse shows the public can see horse milking
and even have a glass of the precious liquid. |
Despite the fact that most horse milkers start with ponies
(one has nearly 200 New Forest ponies, a breed imported from
the U.K.), the most important horse dairy farm of the country
works exclusively with Brabants for two main reasons: 1)
security–most
pony milkers have been seriously kicked at least one time
during milking. Frans and Nadine de Brabander, who run a
successful
horse dairy farm near the little town of Lier, have never
had any problem with their heavies, and, 2) milking a horse
requires
the same effort as milking a pony, but gives you twice the
amount of milk (1.35 gallons vs. 0.65 for a pony, per day).
Another good reason for using Brabants is the strong demand
for their foals, partially because they are well-mannered
and used to being manipulated. One blue-roan colt, bred by
the de Brabanders, is actually doing fine for his new owner,
Matt Lahti of Floodwood, Minnesota. All foals are sold after
weaning (mostly 8 months), even the fillies. Frans de Brabander
prefers to buy lactating mares (always registered Brabants)
and sell the foals after weaning. The
de Brabanders have always owned a few Belgian Warmbloods
and were, at one time, very involved in show jumping. Their
interest in horse milk started in 1997 when a family member
was severely afflicted with an intestinal problem known
as Crohn’s disease. They made a trip to Holland to
purchase some horse milk and, after two months of consuming
.06 gallons each day, his condition was greatly improved.
They started milking their own Warmbloods, but it did not
come without risks of being kicked. This is what prompted
them to switch to Brabants. Nadine soon gave up her job
to stay at home and tend to the milking and horse chores.
A few months later, Frans did likewise and their dairy
business has been very successful ever since.
Today, the de Brabanders milk an average of 30 Brabant
mares, starting each day by separating the foals from their
dams at 3:30 a.m. so the mares will be ready for the first
of five milking sessions of the day. The first session
is usually at 7:30 a.m., followed every 3 hours with another.
Around 8 p.m., mares and foals are put back together for
the night. They stay together for an even longer time if
Frans and Nadine enjoy a very rare day off. The farm is
open to visitation every day and they currently receive
two or three buses of visitors each week.
Milking a mare starts two months after foaling, as soon
as solid food intake by the foal is optimum, until month
eight, when the foals are weaned. And, as we are talking
about solid food, this is always as natural as possible
(good home-grown grass, hay and corn silage). The ingredients
of commercial feeds are always checked by a lab. During
the 6 month milking period, no drugs are administered to
the mares and, if a mare has to be treated for an illness,
she is pulled out of the milking circuit. Additionally,
milk samples are taken every month by a governmental lab
and checked for hygiene, composition, etc. The fresh milk,
filtered for impurities, goes into a standard milk cooler,
at which point it is ready for consumption or further,
optional processing, such as freeze drying (an $80,000
investment in U.S. funds) for milk powder, anti-allergic
non-perfumed cosmetics (skin creams, lotions, aftershave,
soap) and even horse milk liquor (delicious!). No cheese
is produced from horse milk due to its low fat content.
Until recently (before freeze drying), most of the daily
production was sold frozen. A daily .06 gallon (1/4 liter)
dose consumed for four weeks is recommended by most dieticians.
The price for a one month supply (28 x 0.06 gallon) is
$45, which gives us an average price of $25 a gallon (again,
in U.S. dollars).
The recently introduced powdered horse milk is packed
in 1 lb. cans for home consumption or in small 1 ounce
vacuum-sealed plastic bags for travellers, which finds
a good demand from sportspeople, business folks, etc. Mix
one bag with good quality water (approximately .06 gallon)
and you have your daily recommended ration, simple as that.
Cold water is necessary because horse milk may never be
heated above 95°. Given the recent events, this form
of horse milk could be a problem while travelling through
customs. (Says the custom officer, ”What’s
that white powder, sir?“ Answer: “Horsemilk,
Officer, just horse milk.”) Regardless, there is
a strong demand for horse milk powder from all over the
world, but our guests want to keep their dairy to a size
that they can manage by themselves. Their primary concern
lies in quality, not quantity.
Unlike the bovine dairy industry, where a cow can be bred
to calve at any time of year, it’s much more difficult
to ensure a year-round supply of fresh horse milk. In spite
of trying to breed mares for varying foaling times, most
mares are more readily brought into estrous during the
late spring and early summer seasons. It tends to make
the business more of a seasonal one, such as PMU collection,
rather than bovine milking. Freezing and freeze-drying
any excess milk (if there is any) can help to fill the “winter
gaps.”
Now comes the final question: Why equine milk? Do you
know that the Austrian Empress Sissi never travelled without
a bunch of jennets providing her with enough milk to fill
a bath tub each day? The first reason for drinking horse
milk is, of course, not cosmetic but medical, especially
for metabolical, gastrointestinal and liver problems, but
also for recovering after surgery and severe illness, cholesterol
problems, allergy to cows’ milk, stress, skin problems,
stiff joints or just to keep fit and well. Horse milk strengthens
the body, boosts the immune system and increases a person’s
energy and vitality. In the case of metabolic disorders,
it stimulates internal cleansing. A word of caution–people
having allergies to horses should, of course, be very careful
before drinking horse milk. Allergies to horses, horse
hair and horse milk is an unfortunate reality for some.
Horse milk is very close in composition to human milk
except in fat and calories. Cows’ milk consists of
3.7% fat, while human milk is 3.5%. Horse milk, however,
is just 1.25% fat, most of which is polyunsaturated (the “good” kind).
Furthermore, horse milk contains just 44 calories per 100
grams (or 3.5273 oz.), compared to 64 for cows’ and
70 for human. Additionally, lactose (milk sugar) is higher
in horse milk than in cow and human milk, as is albumin,
the latter of which is very beneficial for improving digestibility.
Analysis such as this provides only figures to ponder,
but one thing is for certain–most people feel much
better after drinking horse milk! Given that the industry
results in happy and healthy customers, happy mares, happy
foals and happy horse milkers, horse milk just may be a
gift from heaven.
For more information about the de Brabander’s milking
operation, visit their web site at www.horsemilkfarm.com. |