johnny11 Posted January 27, 2011 Report Posted January 27, 2011 Hi All recently I have been reading a lot of articles and can somebody clear something up. When people use a spoon to feed and they say a tablespoon. Do they actually mean a desert spoon or tablespoon. To me a tablespoon is the very large spoon mainly used when cooking and a desert spoon is what you eat your soup with. One article said evening feed 2 tablespoons. that seems a lot to me Am I Missing Something Here? John
OLDYELLOW Posted January 27, 2011 Report Posted January 27, 2011 tablespoon usually 1 am and 2 in evening , all grains weigh different due to mass , it may seem a lot however you remove after 10 to 15 minutes
alex young Posted January 27, 2011 Report Posted January 27, 2011 Hi All recently I have been reading a lot of articles and can somebody clear something up. When people use a spoon to feed and they say a tablespoon. Do they actually mean a desert spoon or tablespoon. To me a tablespoon is the very large spoon mainly used when cooking and a desert spoon is what you eat your soup with. One article said evening feed 2 tablespoons. that seems a lot to me Am I Missing Something Here? JohnJohn,I use a spoon when feeding, a 15ml measuring spoon as used in cooking it is the same as a 1tbs which is a slightly rounded dessert spoon.I know the very large spoon you refer to, this holds alot more than 15ml(approx 1/2 oz) hope this helps.
johnny11 Posted January 27, 2011 Author Report Posted January 27, 2011 John,I use a spoon when feeding, a 15ml measuring spoon as used in cooking it is the same as a 1tbs which is a slightly rounded dessert spoon.I know the very large spoon you refer to, this holds alot more than 15ml(approx 1/2 oz) hope this helps. Thanks Alex. that large spoon to me has always been known as a table spoon and the others a desert spoon but the 15mls make more sense to me. Do you give one moring and rwo at night John
Guest IB Posted January 27, 2011 Report Posted January 27, 2011 I think a lot of it is down to 'lost in translation' I notice fanciers on the continent use the term 'soup spoon' but around here at least, at home, folks use the same type of spoon whether they are eating soup or dessert. It is called a tablespoon, and depending on the grain you are measuring out with it, it holds between 8 & 10 grams.
johnny11 Posted January 27, 2011 Author Report Posted January 27, 2011 I think a lot of it is down to 'lost in translation' I notice fanciers on the continent use the term 'soup spoon' but around here at least, at home, folks use the same type of spoon whether they are eating soup or dessert. It is called a tablespoon, and depending on the grain you are measuring out with it, it holds between 8 & 10 grams. Do fanciers who fly races of 300-400 miles still measure the corn out?? John
Guest IB Posted January 27, 2011 Report Posted January 27, 2011 Do fanciers who fly races of 300-400 miles still measure the corn out?? John From what I've read on the forum over the years, the corn ration is always measured in some way - whether it be 'handfuls' , 'cupfuls' or even the 'hopper / feeder - ful' if you have food in front of them all the time.
alex young Posted January 27, 2011 Report Posted January 27, 2011 Thanks Alex. that large spoon to me has always been known as a table spoon and the others a desert spoon but the 15mls make more sense to me. Do you give one moring and rwo at night JohnJohn as I only race up to 200mls,I give one am. one pm. till tues pm. then I will give two.
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