The obvious question is: why do they have the dog at all? Animals
deserve better. They're not furniture or accessories for the American
dream, but living beings with needs. L
On Feb 4, 2012, at 12:34 AM, Neville Munn wrote:
Over 9 months of vet treatment for inner ear bacterial infection
{swabbed under anaesthetic} failed so I made some EIS/CS and told
daughter to get a syringe casing and squirt some directly into the
ear, infection was fixed practically overnight, the daughter said it
was fixed in 24 hours. Labradors are prone to filthy ears so she uses
EIS/CS periodically to maintain clean and infection free ears. She's
been doing this for a few years now, she also pours some into its
water bowl periodically.
Because daughter works, this dog spends 25 hours a day on its gut in
the kennel sleeping so occasionally one ear will be scraped raw and
bleeding from sleeping on it on the edge of the kennel opening, I've
treated this on more than one occasion too, with success, but needs
spraying on as many times a day as feasibly possible {I do this when
we happen to visit} but healing is not as quick when we aren't
visiting cos the dog spends all day and every day in its kennel when
daughter is at work.
Other daughters cat had severe open wounds from fighting, told her to
squirt some on the wound as often as she could and when she could and
the wound healed up remarkably quick. Bit tricky with a cat as cat's
don't cooperate all that well <g>. Cos the cat always licked the
wound it was ingesting EIS/CS as well as what remained on the wound,
attacked it from two directions if you like. I've treated this cat on
two occasions and both times with fairly quick recovery. The other
occasion was for quite severe war wounds on the face, the cat couldn't
lick its own face as efficiently so that heeled quicker.
I'm at the moment getting someone else to treat their dog for
operation wound {on the throat or a tad further down I believe} which
hasn't healed in over 18 months to two years, but as they live in the
city I can't get to see the dog myself. I'm not sure if they are
doing as I asked them to. I don't get any feedback either, which is
annoying, but they did ask for more EIS/CS the other week. I don't
think they are administering anywhere near enough for quicker
recovery, nevermind, we're going to the city next month so will suss
things out.
Absolutely swear by this stuff.
N.
> From: [email protected]
> Date: Fri, 3 Feb 2012 22:18:04 -0600
> To: [email protected]
> Subject: CS>CS and dogs
>
>
> This is something that I will be posting to the dog lists that I own
> and the dog lists that I am on, but before I do, I wanted to ask this
> list if anyone else has done this and what more they can tell me
about
> using CS for dogs with skin issues or other issues.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Joyce Miller
>