Not paying attention to the negative comments. Thank you for the video and info. I don't know why I didn't think of it. Remembering from my history class, the women used to take sheets or some large pieces of cloth and toss the wheat into the air, allowing the breeze to blow away the shaff and bugs. Thank you again.
I think I'd have to air clean wheat ten times over to be sure the bugs were visibly gone...but then while they were eating the wheat weren't they also pooping all over it too? If so, how could you possibly be sure there was no bug poop still left on the wheat?
Not paying attention to the negative comments. Thank you for the video and info. I don't know why I didn't think of it. Remembering from my history class, the women used to take sheets or some large pieces of cloth and toss the wheat into the air, allowing the breeze to blow away the shaff and bugs. Thank you again.
I might be wrong, but I don't think that wheat bugs carry any pathogens that will harm humans.
I think I'd have to air clean wheat ten times over to be sure the bugs were visibly gone...but then while they were eating the wheat weren't they also pooping all over it too? If so, how could you possibly be sure there was no bug poop still left on the wheat?
Great vid! Next time don't film in portrait