Jump to content

Recommended Posts

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-london-12569011


Thoughts? Would you eat it? Its true what they say if its good enough for babies it must be good enough for us too. Anyone gonna go Covent Garden? ?14 a serving, now thats expensive icecream!!! Very out there idea I must say. But they think it will be a massive success.




EDITED TO SAY: P.S THANK YOU FOR REMOVING MOD, I DON'T MEAN TO DOUBLE POST. I'M INNOCENT I PROMISE.

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/15977-who-saw-this-today/
Share on other sites

lEDf - I was thinking the same, if it was my breastmilk it would be different. I think?! Then again we may be missing the most amazing icecream ever.. For ?14 you would hope so anyway.


Belle I see your point too, they may well do that aswell, never know. Its the way she says "What's the harm in using my assets for a bit of extra cash?"


Just thought I'd throw it out there anyway, very controversial.

You have a better idea where cows milk has come from..... Cows are presumably either organic or not, there are no questions as to lifestyle, diet, habits and hygiene (although I appreciate the milk is pasteurised). I do question someone selling their breast milk. That said I've never had any want to try my own, but then I don't like cows milk either and was formula fed ;-)
I find the whole thing an irritating publicity stunt which is doing nothing to help the already struggling image of breastfeeding in the public view. There was an item on the lunchtime news yesterday (PR mission accomplished) with vox pops of various ordinary people on street responding with variations on the "eugh / disgusting / hahaha " line. It's such a cheap trick.

i'm in 'yuck' and the 'clever marketing trick' camp


>"I think it's very telling that even women who bf often go "yuck" at the idea of drinking it, while we don't think twice about drinking the milk of cows."


... is that a fair comparison?


I love steak... but not sure i'd fancy eating a chunk of muscle off someone's back?


edit to say:


plus - most people feel a huge instinct to bf, it's been done for thousands of years and it's completely 'natural'

I have NO instinct to feed off fellow human beings. I can't for the life of me ever remember reading that cave men/woman felt a bit parched and thought... "hmmm... so and so's just had a baby - i'll nip over next door and ask if she'd mind..."


edit 2nd time to say:


As it's basic biology to bf - it's basic biology to feed DOWN the food chain - not across. As with pretty much every other species out there.


i mean... really?

As you all know I'm very much pro breastfeeding but still, I just really don't think I could do it. Is this just because it isn't the norm? I do not know.


But then when you think about milk donation, and babies taking other peoples milk does it then became morally wrong that your child could have someone elses milk but you would never be prepared to try it or whatever? I just don't know.


I wouldn't say I found the idea Yuck! but its definitely very out there and bizarre. Can you imagine walking into Sainsbury's and picking up a pint of breastmilk? Its society for you I suppose..


Then again there are people out there that probably wish they could just walk into a shop and get it. Around 1-2 years ago channel 4 showed a programme 'Other peoples breastmilk' I believe. In the programme they showed various people using breastmilk for different reasons (cross feeding, wet nursing etc). One 59y/o man was getting weekly donations to help try and calm/fight off the symptoms of his prostate cancer, he thought it was brilliant (he also thought it was indeed curing him - research and studies are on going and some completed into use in cancer sufferers) and I say if it helps try it. Maybe he would be happier eating icecream as opposed to drinking 'other peoples breastmilk'. It could be an absolutely genius idea.

I think it's partly the commercialism of it that it distasteful (he he). My grandmother and her sister in law were each other's kids wet nurses (when one had to go out, the other would make sure both kids were fed), but this is very different from a stranger being paid to give something to another adult who has no nutritional need for it. I don't think it is morally objectionable or anything just pointless, gimicky and, yep, I'll say it again, gross.

Ladies have sold their full heads of hair for many decades,


more recently models and actresses sell their bodily looks,


why shouldn't lactating ladies sell their natural product?


The lactating mums are unlikely to be in employment and are presumably struggling to survive on a single wage with an extra being to provide for.


I wonder if this might stimulate a whole new industry, as there was never any money to be made in wet-nursing.


Perhaps a competition on how much you can sell a 10 ounce feed for?


The price to beat ladies is ?15 for 10 ounces as that's what the ice cream mum nets.


?50 worth of premium bonds to the winner!

10oz is not far short of 300ml which is a lot to express not to mention fairly time consuming to do so even if possible. I think a lot of b/f mothers would struggle to express that volume. There is also the issue that that milk would be in addition to what they are feeding their own baby so quite exhausting to do on a regular basis. It's definitely not a get rich quick plan!


No idea whether you are male or female, if female whether you have expressed milk but if you can express 10oz with ease in a short period of time then my feeling is you are in the minority!


Wonder what sperm donator's get paid per ounce ;-)

I've often wondered whether there's a black market for breast milk... it would be a logical outcome of the proven benefits of breast milk vs. the comparative difficulty for many exclusively to breastfeed.


But to the point, I'd never eat the ice cream. And anyway, it's horrid-tasting stuff to the adult palate! (I've kissed enough droplets off my dribbly boys to have an opinion.)

I found literally hundreds of pleas from both women and men, bidding as high as $7.00 per ounce of milk.

(from GinaG3 link)



The ice cream lady is selling short, she should be getting $70 a go, about ?45 not ?15, the Americans always were higher paid, and better organised.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I'd say hold on to it in case you need it. There may be a time when it helps you get around more easily. You'd know if that's easily done, if you've got somewhere to park it etc   
    • I scarcely use my ancient (1998!) non ULEZ compliant car any more, which I have had for nearly 20 years. It is presently  used mainly to take bulky  things up to my allotment or the tip, occasional weekends away,  festivals or  camping trips, and sometimes giving people lifts to and from stations. But that's mainly because I have to pay the ULEZ charge every time I use it. It has been very reliable, is  in good nick and passes its MOT every year. Now, after months without use apart from opening the door to put things into the car, a new battery bought last September is dead and won't charge 😭 I realise this is my own stupid fault for not realising that you shouldn't let a battery completely discharge, and I should have gone for a drive or charged the battery before. I have hung onto the car because I am over the age limit for car share  club type things and car hire companies (though my daughter has just found a website with car hire schemes for ancient people). Also I am not used to driving more modern cars! I looked into getting a (second hand)  replacement when ULEZ came in, and it just all seemed like too much hassle. Now I don't know whether it's worth shelling out for yet another new battery (DUH) . The one I got is still  under guarantee, but only for "manufacturing faults" and I imagine this won't apply in this case. But if I don't I will have to somehow dispose of the car, which also needs at least one tyre inflating, for which I need a working battery 😭 If you don't have a car, how do you manage, especially if like me you are very old?  And/or do you have any advice on whether I should keep the car, or if not what to do with it? 
    • LOL, no Sue, definitely Musk Turtles.
    • They will have some rationale for this, but it feels like a deliberate testing of the waters, to see how much of the park they can take, with the trackway right across the length of the whole playing fields and the new and exceedingly ugly, extended footprint. My guess is soon we will see further encroachments and extensions and even more events, from other organisations. Peckham Rye is on course to be a giant, summer-long event space, just like Brockwell Park. I have just checked Southwark Council licensing and it seems the intention is to use the Gala infrastructure to mount events, this may only the extra 'family' day but 6 days are mentioned. The Licensing Sub-Committee heard from the representative for the Applicant who advised that the purpose of the application was to present a family festival day and two live concert days to take place in Peckham Rye Park in May/June within the existing site operated by We are the Fair/Assembled Gala.  The Applicant would work in collaboration with the Peckham Festival on the events falling on the weekend after GALA. GALA normally is held on the late May Bank Holiday Weekend.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...