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About Camel Milk Products:
Camel milk could keep your skin forever young
New Hope Offered for skin Disease!

Our Mission:

The CAMeLK company is dedicated to providing you with the most advanced skin care regimens made from camel´s milk available anywhere.we believe that beautiful skin starts with healthy skin.

No matter what your age or how damaged your skin, starting the quality CAMeLK skin care regimen can easily reverse ten to twenty years of damage and aging, giving you back the glowing, shiny, healthy skin of youth.

Why Camel´s Milk Skin Care Products?

Camel´s milk could keep your skin forever young!

Because nothing is better than Mother Nature!
 
 
There are six types of fatty acids found in camel milk, including lanolic acid, which is effective in controlling wrinkles as well as improving skin tone.
People living in deserts to help moisturize their skin have traditionally used camel milk soaps. Camel milk is a natural source of alpha-hydroxy acids, which are known to plump the skin, and smoothes fine lines. Alpha-hydroxy acids help to shed the outer horny layer of dead cells on the skin (epidermis) by helping to break down sugars, which are used to hold skin cells together. This helps in revealing new cells, which are more elastic and clear. Alpha-hydroxy acids help to eliminate wrinkles and age spots and relieve dryness as they make the outer layer of the skin thinner and support the lower layer of the dermis by making it thick.
Camel milk three times as much Vitamin C as cow´s milk and is rich in iron, unsaturated fatty acids and B vitamins, also contains proteins, casein, potassium, and has anti-bacterial qualities. Since the camel is built to live in such harsh conditions, its milk is equally adapted to keep its young alive in times of little or no other food. For that reason, it is very nutritious. The water content in camel milk is high and it does not spoil or curdle soon.
Traditional camel cultures have always been aware of the health-promoting effects of camel milk. It is suggested that camel milk may be useful in curing skin conditions like psoriasis, allergies, and maybe even help skin cancer. Camel milk is used to make cosmetics and even creams for sensitive baby skin.
Using milk in beauty products is an ancient beauty secret. Cleopatra´s beauty bath included milk, herbs and oils just like CAMeLK body wash.
CAMeLK is a natural source of Alpha-Hydroxy acids, which are known to plump the skin, and smoothes fine lines.
CAMeLK proteins are used as moisturizers for the skin.
CAMeLK is rich in Vitamin C, which is an Anti-Oxidant. It also has Anti-Bacterial qualities.
Milk based beauty products have traditionally been used for sensitive skin and baby skin. Milk is also considered a natural skin cleanser.
CAMeLK are all natural, biodegradable and long lasting guaranteed to produce a rich lather and leave the skin feeling smooth and moisturized.
 
 
Why CAMeLK?
The CAMeLK cream is registered as PENDING PATENT!
 
 

The milk protein gene specific element

PMID: 12647956 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
 

Camel milk protein rich in half-cystine
The amino acid sequence of a recently isolated camel milk protein rich in half-cystine has been determined by peptide analyses. The 117-residue protein has 16 half-cystine residues, concluded to correspond to disulfide bridges and suggesting a tight conformation of the molecule. Comparisons of the structure with those of other proteins reveal several interesting relationships. The camel protein is clearly homologous with a previously reported rat whey phosphoprotein of possible importance for mammary gland growth regulation, and with a mouse protein of probable relationship to neurophysins. The camel, rat and mouse proteins may represent species variants from a rapidly evolving gene. Residue identities in pairwise comparisons are 40% for the camel/rat proteins and 33% for the camel/mouse proteins, with 38 positions conserved in all three forms. The camel protein also reveals an internal repeat pattern similar to that for the other two proteins. The homology between the three milk whey proteins has wide implications for further relationships. Thus, previously noticed similarities, involving either of the milk proteins, include limited similarities to casein phosphorylation sites for the camel protein, to neurophysins in repeat and half-cystine patterns for the mouse and rat proteins, and to an antiprotease for the rat protein. These similarities are reinforced by the camel protein structure and the recognition of the three whey proteins as related. Finally a few superficial similarities with the insulin family of peptides and with some other peptides of biological importance are noticed. Combined, the results relate the camel protein in a family of whey proteins, and extend suggestions of relationships with some binding proteins.
PMID: 3743571 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]
 
 
 
 
 
 
Beauty Care

CAMeLK-Beauty Care Products

10 Years Younger in 60 Days

CAMeLK-Beauty Care Products has a unique healing power, which the Bedouins have known of the curative powers of camel´s milk for thousands of years. Scientific studies in Israel and around the world have proven its unusual medicinal properties and confirmed its healthful benefits to mankind. Camel´s milk contains vital immune properties and is a natural source of alpha-hydroxy acids for softening the skin, keeping it supple, smooth and preventing wrinkles. Camel´s milk is saturated with proteins used in moisturizing creams, rich in Vitamin C (a natural anti-oxidant), anti-bacterial agents to help protect and maintain healthy skin, and contains an abundance of vitamins A, B1, B2, B12 and carotene.
CAMeLK-Beauty Care Products helps stop the itching and flaking of skin rash and improves skin health. It can help heal skin that is dry, sore, flaking. While it is not a cure for your skin, it is safer than other treatments commonly used, but, with side effects highly toxic, pharmaceutical drugs.
Therapists and doctors who have used CAMeLK-Beauty Care Products to care for psoriasis report that it works better than any product they had ever used (over-the-counter and prescription) for topical relief or to remedy skin care.
CAMeLK-Beauty Care Products is a unique natural cream whose source is the milk of the female camel, known for millennia as having amazing healing properties and was developed after a comprehensive study was conducted on experimental groups, supervised by a dermatologist. The Cream aids in the balance of the skin´s cells and other components, moisturizes, softens, and protects skin from damaging elements in our environment;
 CAMeLK-Beauty Care Products is 100% safe and effective.
 
Instructions for use:
Recommended to spread on and massage skin twice a day or as needed.
For maximum effectiveness, continue use for at least 60 days. Store in a cool, dark place.
For external use only.
 
This information does not constitute medical advice and/or a substitute for medical treatment. Consult a physician for any medical problems.
 
CAMeLK-Beauty Care Products

Skin - Introduction
The skin is the largest and one of the most intriguing organs of the body, accounting for 16 per cent of body weight.
The skin is continually repairing and renewing itself. When you are young, the main skin complaints are greasy skin and acne. But as you grow older, the skin gets dry and the challenge is to counteract the dryness of the skin. However, you can have beautiful skin no matter what your age, race or color. The secret is to understand how your skin functions, and to take care of it properly.
The Skin is composed of cells; sweat pores, and sebaceous glands. The surface layer of the skin is covered with a thin sheath of dead cells. These are continually being pushed up to the surface from below. If the dead cells are not removed, they can reduce and even block the skin´s effort to breathe and eliminate waste.
For most of us, when we refer to skin care, we mean caring for the face. It is true that face, more than any other, needs care and attention. The face is constantly exposed to the elements, even in severe winter when the rest of the body is well wrapped. Hence, the face is one of the first parts of the body to show signs of aging.

Functions of the Skin
The skin has several important functions.
It provides a protective barrier, defending the body from all outside environmental influences, including extremes in temperature and exposure to disease organisms such as harmful bacteria and infections, wind and ultraviolet rays from sunshine.
It acts as a thermostat, retaining heat or cooling you down with sweat.
It acts as a waste disposal. Certain waste is expelled from your body 24 hours a day through your skin in the form of excess water, toxins and carbon dioxide.
It is important in body processes such as respiration, and metabolism.
It provides you with a sense of touch to help you communicate with the outside world.
It responds to sudden changes in emotions.
The skin is the body´s main organ of sexual attraction.

Parts of the Skin
Our skin is a complex engineered covering.
The skin has a slightly acidic coating of oil at the surface. This coating protects the skin against some bacteria. Below the surface is a complex of sweat and oil glands, hair follicles, blood vessels, nerves, and muscle tissue. These are held together by a tough connective tissue called collagen.
Collagen is very important in determining the health of the skin. The relative health of the collagen determines the contour of the skin, how wrinkled and lined it is. Healthy collagen is often called soluble collagen, because it can absorb and hold moisture.
Below the collagen is a layer of fat and muscle, which provides some contour and acts as a cushion and as insulation.
The skin has three layers. The inner most layer is known as the lower dermis, the middle layer is called the dermis, and the outer layer is known as the epidermis.
Lower Dermis
The various glands such as the oil and sweat glands originate in the lower dermis. From here, they rise to the surface of the skin to eliminate waste matter. Lower dermis also acts as a cushion for the rest of the skin. It contains the finely distributed muscles of the skin that regulate body temperature.
Dermis
The dermis is the layer that lies underneath the epidermis, and it is composed entirely of living cells. It consists of bundles of tough fibers that give your skin its elasticity, firmness and strength. There are also blood vessels, which feed vital nutrients to these areas.
The most important function of dermis is respiration. The countless tiny blood vessels, or capillaries end here in finely-drawn networks, from where they feed the outer skin layer. Dermis also determines the tone of the skin.
Epidermis
This is the top layer of skin and the one you can actually see. It protects your body from invasion and infection and helps to seal in moisture. It´s built up of several layers of living cells which are then topped by sheets of dead cells. It´s constantly growing, with new cells being produced at its base. They quickly die, and are pushed up to the surface by the arrival of new ones, These dead cells eventually flake away, which means that every new layer of skin is another chance to have a soft, glowing complexion.
The lower levels of living cells are fed by the blood supply from underneath, whereas the upper dead cells only need water to ensure they´re kept plump and smooth.
The epidermis is responsible for your coloring, as it holds the skin´s pigment. It ranges in thickness from l/20-th of an inch on the palms and soles, to 1/200-th of an inch on the face.
The skin contains the following specialized organs:
Sebaceous glands are tiny organs that usually open into hair follicles on the surface of your skin. They produce an oily secretion, called sebum, which is your skin´s natural lubricant.
The sebaceous glands are most concentrated on the scalp and face - particularly around the nose, cheeks, chin and forehead, which is why these are usually the most oily areas of your skin.
Sweat glands are all over your body. There are millions of them and their main function is to regulate your body temperature. When sweat evaporates on the skin´s surface, the temperature of your skin drops.
Hairs grow from the hair follicles. They can help keep your body warm by trapping air underneath them. There are no hairs on the soles of your feet and palms of your hands.

Skin Problems
The major skin problems most people face are wrinkling (due to age), and blemishes, or acne.

Aging or Wrinkling
Aging of the skin occurs when collagen becomes hard and gets meshed with neighboring collagen fibers. This prevents the collagen from holding water and plumping up. Instead, it collapses on itself, binds with other collagen fibers, and forms a kind of fishnet below the surface of the skin, which is manifested as wrinkles.
Oxidation or free radical formation plays a pivotal role in the cross-linking of collagen. This is what happens:
1. The atoms of human tissue begin to decay, or lose electrons. This results in a deficiency of electron.
2. The atom attempts to regain its electrical balance by stealing one or more electrons from neighboring atoms.
3. This, in turn, creates another atom that has a deficiency of electron. The atom tries to steal electron from another atom.
4. The result is a chain reaction in which atoms are changing their structures and forming bonds that would not otherwise occur.
5. The net effect is a chaos of cross-linking collagen fibers, revealed on the skin´s surface as wrinkles.
Acne
Acne occurs when oil, called sebum, blocks the pores and hair follicles at the skin´s surface, thus preventing the skin from eliminating oil and waste. This causes waste to accumulate in the pores, resulting in pockets of inflection that manifest as red sores, boils, and pimples, Acne does not occur when the pores remain unblocked.

Basic Skin Care
The care you give to your skin depends to a large extent on the type of the skin you have. However, we will discuss the basic skin care principles first. Then we will go into specific recommendations based on the type of skin you have.
A daily routine of skin care requires no more than ten minutes and requires only three simple steps each evening and morning:
Cleanse
Cleaning the Skin
Cleaning the skin is important as it removes the dead cells from the surface of the skin. It also will remove the dust and dirt that chokes the pores on the skin. If the dust is allowed to accumulate, it can block the pores thus blocking the secretion of the glands from coming to the top of the skin providing it the weapons it need to fight against infections, toxic agents etc. It also gives the shine or glow to the surface of the skin.
Soap and Natural Cleaners
Skin experts recommend avoiding soap because of its high pH. A high pH (alkaline) soap will dry the skin and diminish its life expectancy. The skin´s surface is mildly acidic, having a pH of around 5. Most soaps are well over 7, and some as high as 10. Soaps with a high pH will not only dry the skin but also eliminate its acid mantle (coating on the surface).
You can make good skin cleansers from natural products. For example, products that contain vegetable oils, such as coconut oil, and water, combine with sebum and allow it to be dissolved and rinsed away. At the same time, water dissolves dirt.
Effective skin cleansers can contain a number of different vegetable oils, including coconut, sesame, or palm oils. These are safe and effective cleansers and have a relatively low pH. Stearic acid provides the skin a pearly firmness.
Another organic products that is increasingly useful in skin care is seaweed. The high mineral content of seaweed stimulates circulation, helps eliminate toxins imbedded in the skin, and leaves the skin feeling smooth. Seaweeds can also strengthen the immunity and healing functions of the skin by providing the needed minerals.
Facial Scrubs
Facial scrubs help clean the surface of the skin by removing the dead skins and the dirt mechanically. We recommend that you use a facial scrub that contains a mild abrasive. The coarseness of these abrasives vary. For example, it may contain very fine, mild base of oatmeal or ground-up almonds. Some products may contain, however, coarser materials such as silica or fine sand or the shells of almonds, apricots, or walnuts.
Since women spend considerable more amount of money and time on make ups and skin care, we would expect that their skin will be smoother and blemish free compared to that of men. However, studies have found exactly the opposite. These studies have found that men have fewer blemishes and smoother skin than women on the face. Experts suggest that men are exfoliating their faces every day by shaving. The razor removes the top layer of dead cells every day. This allows the skin to breathe and eliminate waste much easier. This may explain why men´s facial skin is much more smoother than women´s. Women can accomplish the same by using a mild abrasive scrub on their faces, every other day.
Camel´s milk to exfoliates
Using natural camel´s milk to exfoliate and to clean your skin. Milk is incredibly beneficial for the skin in many different ways. Its various ingredients serve a multitude of skin-improving purposes.
Part of the reason camel´s milk works wonders for skin is because it contains different kinds of acids. Don´t be frightened by the word "acids," because the kind contained in camel´s milk is too mild to cause burning of the skin. The alpha hydroxy acid contained in camel´s milk, called lactic acid, acts as a gentle cleanser for skin.
Another naturally occurring acid in camel´s milk is a beta hydroxy acid that acts is an excellent skin exfoliates. Exfoliation is extremely important when it comes to skin care. Removing the old skin cells makes way for the newer, more vibrant skin underneath to shine through.
Camel´s milk bath producers enrich their products with vitamin E to further condition skin but milk naturally contains other skin helping vitamins on its own so purchasing such a product is not really necessary.
Camel´s milk also contains fat and proteins that provide the skin with a softer, more supple feeling. The fat milk naturally contains can serve a good purpose when it is not ingested.
camel´s milk The Right Way To Wash Your Face
1. Moisten your face with water. Work up lather by rubbing the soap between wet palms. Using your fingertips (not the bar of soap), massage the lather into your face and throat.
2. Rinse thoroughly with a washcloth or with splashes of water. Take three times as much time for rinsing as compared to what you took for lathering. The important thing is that you remove all of the soap so any caustic it contains won´t burn your face.
3. Blot dry with a soft towel; vigorous rubbing with coarse material aggravates and tugs at your skin.
camel´s milk Toners Thorough cleansing removes more than makeup, grime, and cellular debris. It also strips your skin of its protective shield. Toners, fresheners, and astringents restore the pH balance of the acid mantle; remove any remaining makeup that was not cleaned up, oily cleanser, or soap film.
After the skin is thoroughly clean, apply a skin toner or rinse that has an astringent effect. This will close the pores, tighten the skin, and keep it from being exposed to many of the toxins that are floating in the air or other environmental pollutants.
A wide variety of toners are available. We recommend that you avoid those products that contain alcohol. Alcohol dries the skin and harms the soluble collagen below the surface of the skin.
camel´s milk Moisturizers
Water is the secret ingredient for dewy-fresh skin. Well-moisturized skin is soft and supple, reflects a healthy glow and ages less quickly. They prevent the skin from drying and chapping, thus slowing the aging process.
Water moves through the body to the surface in a process called "Tran epidermal water loss" leaving skin pleasingly plump and firm. If your system is deficient in water, the skin´s upper layers become dry and brittle.
Drinking at least six glasses of water daily and eating fluid-rich fruits and vegetables help normalize dry or oily conditions, and is essential for preventing your body from robbing its necessary moisture at the expense of your skin.
In addition to internal liquid refreshment, skin requires external water replenishing. Moisturizers or humectants attract moisture to the skin´s surface and hold it there.
Younger skin only needs light conditioning whereas older skin needs specific nourishing treatments.
CAMeLK-Beauty Skin Care Products is providing you with the most advanced skin care regimens made from Camel´s Milk available anywhere, we believe that beautiful skin starts with healthy skin. No matter what your age or how damaged your skin, starting a quality CAMeLK skin care regimen, can easily erase ten to twenty years, giving you back the glowing, shiny, healthy skin of youth.
There are six types of fatty acids found in camel milk, including lanolic acid, which is effective in controlling wrinkles as well as improving skin tone.
People living in deserts to help moisturize their skin have traditionally used camel milk soaps. Camel milk is a natural source of alpha-hydroxy acids, which are known to plump the skin, and smoothes fine lines.
Alpha-hydroxy acids help to shed the outer horny layer of dead cells on the skin (epidermis) by helping to break down sugars, which are used to hold skin cells together. This helps in revealing new cells, which are more elastic and clear.
Alpha-hydroxy acids help to eliminate wrinkles and age spots and relieve dryness as they make the outer layer of the skin thinner and support the lower layer of the dermis by making it thick.
Camel´s Milk has three times as much Vitamin C as cow´s milk and is rich in iron, unsaturated fatty acids and B vitamins, also contains proteins, casein, potassium, and has anti-bacterial qualities. Since the camel is built to live in such harsh conditions, its milk is equally adapted to keep its young alive in times of little or no other food. For that reason, it is very nutritious. The water content in camel milk is high and it does not spoil or curdle soon. Camel´s milk is very good for skin care. Since ancient times, it has been used effectively to treat everything from dry skin, burns, and insect bites to skin irritations, acne, cuts, and abrasions.
Recommended to spread on and massage the skin with Camel´s Milk Skin Care Cream twice a day or as needed. For maximum effectiveness, continue use for at least 60 days. Store in a cool, dark place.
Traditional camel cultures have always been aware of the health-promoting effects of camel milk. It is suggested that camel milk may be useful in curing skin conditions like psoriasis, allergies, and maybe even help skin cancer. Camel milk is used to make cosmetics, skin care products and even creams for sensitive baby skin.
Using milk in beauty products is an ancient beauty secret. Cleopatra´s beauty bath included milk, herbs and oils just like CAMeLK body wash.
 
CAMeLK is a natural source of Alpha-Hydroxy acids, which are known to plump the skin, and smoothes fine lines.
 
CAMeLK proteins are used as moisturizers for the skin.
 
CAMeLK is rich in Vitamin C, which is an Anti-Oxidant. It also has Anti-Bacterial qualities.
 
Milk based beauty products have traditionally been used for sensitive skin and baby skin. Milk is also considered a natural skin cleanser.
 
CAMeLK are all natural, biodegradable and long lasting guaranteed to produce a rich lather and leave the skin feeling smooth and moisturized.

Night care
Cleanse Remove any makeup with cleansing cream or a natural makeup remover. Wash with mild soap or other cleanser, rinse, and pat dry.
Cleaning the Skin
Cleaning the skin is important as it removes the dead cells from the surface of the skin. It also will remove the dust and dirt that chokes the pores on the skin. If the dust is allowed to accumulate, it can block the pores thus blocking the secretion of the glands from coming to the top of the skin providing it the weapons it need to fight against infections, toxic agents etc. It also gives the shine or glow to the surface of the skin.
CAMeLK-Beauty Care Products
Dermatologists recommend that wrinkles be treated early to maximize effectiveness as well CAMeLK-Beauty Care Products has a unique healing power, which the Bedouins have known of the curative powers of camel´s milk for thousands of years. Scientific studies in Israel and around the world have proven its unusual medicinal properties and confirmed its healthful benefits to mankind. Camel´s milk contains vital immune properties and is a natural source of alpha-hydroxy acids for softening the skin, keeping it supple, smooth and preventing wrinkles. Camel´s milk is saturated with proteins used in moisturizing creams, rich in Vitamin C (a natural anti-oxidant), anti-bacterial agents to help protect and maintain healthy skin, and contains an abundance of vitamins A, B1, B2, B12 and carotene.
All information above does not constitute medical advice and/or a substitute for medical treatment. Consult a physician for any medical problems.  

Camel's milk to treat diabetes

Main Category: Diabetes News
Article Date: 23 Dec 2004 - 13:00 PDT
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The milk of the camel has traditionally been used to treat diabetes. Surprisingly, camel milk does seem to contain high levels of insulin or an insulin-like protein which appears to be able to pass through the stomach without being destroyed.

The stomach's acidity would normally destroy insulin - this is why developing 'oral insulin' is such a challenge.

A small month-long study in people with Type 1 diabetes (which does not appear to have been formally published) suggested that drinking almost a pint of camel milk daily improved blood glucose levels, reducing the need for insulin.

As there have not been enough studies in humans yet, Diabetes UK does not recommend camel milk as a treatment for diabetes - an animal's milk contains nutrients that are tailored for its young

We don't know what the longer-term effects of drinking camel's milk are for humans - like any sensible wise man we'll be keeping a close watch on future developments.

"So, don't get the hump this Christmas if your local supermarket doesn't stock camel's milk," jokes Diabetes UK Care Adviser Phil Casey.
http://www.diabetes.org.uk/news/dec04/camel.htm 

The next thing: camel milk

FAO sees bright prospects for camel milk
18 April 2006, Rome - In Tunisia, people will travel hundreds of kilometres to get hold of some. Herdswomen from Ethiopia and Somalia think nothing of riding a train for 12 hours to sell it in Djibouti, where prices are high. In N’Djamena, Chad, milk bars are mushrooming all over town.

Half way round the globe people consider it a powerful tonic against many diseases. The Gulf Arabs believe it is an aphrodisiac.

From the Western Sahara to Mongolia demand is booming for camel milk. But there just isn’t enough to go round. State-of-the art camel rearing is rudimentary, and much of the 5.4 million tonnes of milk produced every year by the world population of some 20 million camels is guzzled by young camels themselves.

The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) thus sees bright prospects for camel dairy products, which could not only provide more food to people in arid and semi-arid areas, but also give nomadic herders a rich source of income.

FAO is hoping financing will come forward from donors and investors to develop the sector not only at local level but help camel milk move into lucrative markets in the Middle East and the West.

“The potential is massive,” says FAO’s Dairy and Meat expert Anthony Bennett. “Milk is money”.

Nutrition

To devotees, camel milk is pure nectar. While slightly saltier than cows’ milk, it is very good for you. After all, nature designed it to help baby camels grow up in some of the world’s roughest environments – deserts and steppes. That helps explain why it is three times as rich in Vitamin C as cow’s milk.

In Russia, Kazakhstan and India doctors often prescribe it to convalescing patients while in Africa it may be recommended for people living with AIDS.

Somalis are gluttons for the stuff and firmly believe in the milk’s medicinal value. Aside from Vitamin C, it is known to be rich in iron, unsaturated fatty acids and B vitamins.

Camel Dairy Milk Ltd of Nanyuki, Kenya is planning, in partnership with the Kenya Medical Research Institute (KEMRI), to carry out research into the role claimed for camel milk in reducing diabetes and coronary heart disease.

Such features account for the milk’s appeal not only to young camels and their nomad owners but to an estimated 200 million potential customers in the Arab world – and millions more in Africa, Europe and the Americas.

Getting over the humps

Tapping the market for camel milk, however, involves resolving a series of humps in production, manufacturing and marketing. One problem lies in the milk itself, which has so far not proved to be compatible with the UHT (Ultra High Temperature) treatment needed to make it long-lasting. But the main challenge stems from the fact that the producers involved are, overwhelmingly, nomads.

Imagine a tomato cannery whose suppliers regularly all disappear overnight – taking their tomatoes with them. That’s the kind of problem you need to solve if you want to stay in the camel milk business.

(Nomads of course do not wander about the desert for pleasure. They move in search of pasture according to the seasons–and can survive for up to a month in the desert on nothing but ... camel milk.)

Another problem is that nomad camel herders are often reticent to sell their spare milk, which tradition reserves for honoured guests and the poor. It has been noted, however, that such reticence can be dispelled by the offer of a good price.

One-leg stand

To milk a camel in Sudan, approach the animal from the right. Stand on your right leg. Bend your left leg and place a gourd or other recipient on it. A camel udder has four teats. Seize the nearest two and squeeze. The others are for the calf to feed from. Repeat twice a day.

Having the fine balance of a Yoga master isn’t enough, however. Camels can be pretty stubborn, and if your animal dislikes you she won’t hear of being milked. Unlike cows, which store all their milk in their udders, camels keep theirs further up their bodies.

Also essential is the presence of the mother’s calf. She-camels will feed only their own calves, responding to their specific smell. When a calf dies, crafty herders trick mothers at milking time by presenting them with a dummy covered in camel calfskin.

The bottom line here is that camel milk production is generally a low-tech business, which in turn explains why a meagre five litres a day is considered a decent yield.

“No one’s suggesting intensive camel dairy farming,” says Bennett, “but just with improved feed, husbandry and veterinary care daily yields could rise to 20 litres.” Since fresh camel milk fetches roughly a dollar a litre on African markets that would mean serious money for nomads herders who now have few other sources of revenue. A world market worth 10 billion dollars would be entirely within the realm of possibility.

Sons of the clouds

That camel constraints can be overcome is eloquently demonstrated by a British-born engineering graduate, Nancy Abeiderahmanne, who has been operating a successful camel dairy in Mauritania for more than 15 years.

Ms Abeiderahmanne, whose Tiviski (Mauritanian for “springtime”) company also processes cow and goat milk, currently has some 800 camel herders supplying her on daily basis. She collects the fresh milk from up to 80 kilometres from her base, Nouakchott, and hauls it back to her dairy for pasteurization in a refrigerated truck.

The herders, while still nomads (we are sons of the clouds and where the clouds go we must follow), have learned it makes business sense to leave their nursing camels behind when they move up north. This ensures a welcome measure of continuity in Tiviski’s supplies.

The right stuff

Another major challenge for Ms Abeiderahmanne was that although camel milk keeps longer than cow’s, it still has a limited shelf life. Even worse, production is highest just at the time demand is lowest – in the winter months.

The obvious solution was to turn surplus milk into longer-lived cheese. But there were problems in getting it to harden.

In 1992, Ms Abeiderahmanne, with FAO’s help, found the answer. FAO, which had developed the technology to make camel cheese, arranged for a French expert, J.P. Ramet, to go to Nouakchott and show her how to use a special enzyme to give her products the right consistency.

The result was a soft cheese with a white crust which she called “Caravane”. It was quickly dubbed Camelbert.

In 1993, Ms Abeiderrahmane deservedly received the coveted Rolex business enterprise award for her breakthrough. Tougher, however, turned out to be the question of getting permission to export Camelbert.

Khoormog

An alternative way of storing camel milk in places lacking electricity, let alone refrigerators, was found centuries ago in the steppes of Kazakhstan and Mongolia, where herders keep two-humped Bactrian camels.

Nomads there process the fresh produce into fermented milk, Shubat, a local delicacy which is known in nearby Mongolia as Khoormog. In Kazakhstan’s old capital of Almaty, a modern plant produces Kourt, a cheese so hard that most people prefer to grate it. The facility also manufactures camel milk sweets.

Some experts would like to see Kazakhstan’s simple, traditional techniques exported. But the moot question remains: will Beduin go for Khoormog?

Sticky fingers

An easier sell would appear to be the low-fat, camel milk chocolate, which a Vienna-based chocolatier, Johann Georg Hochleitner intends to launch this autumn. With funding from the Abu Dhabi royal family, his company plans to make the chocolate in Austria from powdered camel milk produced at Al Ain in the United Arab Emirates, then ship 50 tons back to the Gulf each month.

“It sounds crazy but it’s a huge project. There’s a potential market of 200 million in the Arab world,” says Hochleitner.

And if you get sticky fingers from Al Nassma – the chocolate’s brand name – you can always wash your hands with camel milk soap produced by the Oasis Camel Dairy of Sonora, California, where camels were introduced as pack animals in the 19th Century.

As the Ahaggar nomads of Algeria say, “Water is the soul. Milk is life”. And money too of course
 
The concentrations of individual casein and whey proteins in camel milk differ markedly to respective protein concentrations in bovine milk. The ratio of beta-casein to kappa-casein is considerably higher in camel milk. beta-Lactoglobulin is absent, but whey acidic protein and peptidoglycan recognition protein have been detected. Genomic sequences upstream to milk-protein genes, which are known to regulate the expression of milk proteins to a great extent, were determined for 10 camel milk-protein genes and compared to respective sequences in other mammals. Multiple sequence alignment showed closest relationships to homologous sequences from other mammals. Comparison of milk protein regulative regions revealed two distantly related groups with pronouncedly different transcription factor site probabilities. The GC-content in sequences of the first group was considerably higher than in sequences of the second group and combined occurrence of CAAT and TATAA boxes was rare, suggesting that the first group represented mostly the housekeeping gene type, probably regulated by cellular signal transduction pathways, whereas the second group helped to regulate genes specifically expressed in terminally differentiated cells of the lactating alveolar epithelium. A core region of the composite response element, which primarily controls milk protein gene activity, was found by a search for elements conserved within all 5´-flanking sequences analyzed, and it is assumed, that the presence of this element determines gene expression in the lactating mammary gland, and binding sites for general activator and repressor factors, surrounding the milk protein gene specific element, are important for regulation of gene activity 
 

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