Know what animal almost never gets cancer? Horses. And most all of them with a halfway caring owner get ivermectin about ever 6-8 weeks.
Whenever a famous horse dies, like Secretariat, the cause of death is never cancer. It might be colic, or complications of laminitis, or euthanasia due to "infirmities of old age;" but I've never heard of a famous horse dying from cancer. Or, frankly, any other horse.
Basically correct, except for all the grey horses and their skin cancers. One thing I think about is all the shit that is on the hay my horses eat. Makes me shudder. I want organic hay. I don't know how to get it anymore. The growers put round up on the hay fields. I hate having to feel like every time I feed, I am exposing the horses to that. We do not have grass pastures where I live in the Southwest
Yes, I've heard about the grey horses with cancer, but that seems to be a genetic thing. Don't know what to do about the hay. I don't own horses now but there's bound to be someplace with organic hay bales for sale.
When my horses had bots one time, the vet treated with ivermectin to prevent colic and the vet always said, if there's any viral respiratory thing going on, this will also take care of that. They always used it as an anti-viral treatment. Of course, if the infection was bacterial they doctored them with antibiotics.
Two of my dogs died of cancer. It takes them out pretty quick, like within months of diagnosis. One was soft tissue sarcoma, and the other was bone cancer.
Edit - but then again all my dogs got all their shots/vaccines in the past. I have two dogs now that have gotten the shots they were "supposed" to get, one is 4 yr old and the other is 1 yr. We won't be giving them all the shots anymore. They will get their heartworm prevention & maybe rabies (maybe!, they don't come around anything that could give them rabies, but never say never, we live in the south & in the county), probably won't give them kennel cough either, though they go for walks & visit the pet store (occasionally) they will never be bordered, if we have to leave them, either family or friend will watch them at our home.
I never tested positive for Coldvid either. Of course I never put that shit up my nose either. How would you know if one of the mouse hunters in the barn had lung cancer? How would I find out if my 17 yo rabbit dog has cancer?
Every domestic animal, cats, dogs, horses, cows, chickens, etc are treated for parasites on a regular schedule. Humans almost never.
Those same animals get cancer all the time
Know what animal almost never gets cancer? Horses. And most all of them with a halfway caring owner get ivermectin about ever 6-8 weeks.
Whenever a famous horse dies, like Secretariat, the cause of death is never cancer. It might be colic, or complications of laminitis, or euthanasia due to "infirmities of old age;" but I've never heard of a famous horse dying from cancer. Or, frankly, any other horse.
Interesting, I wonder if dog and cat proximity to household chemicals and artificial people food could be contributors as well.
Basically correct, except for all the grey horses and their skin cancers. One thing I think about is all the shit that is on the hay my horses eat. Makes me shudder. I want organic hay. I don't know how to get it anymore. The growers put round up on the hay fields. I hate having to feel like every time I feed, I am exposing the horses to that. We do not have grass pastures where I live in the Southwest
Yes, I've heard about the grey horses with cancer, but that seems to be a genetic thing. Don't know what to do about the hay. I don't own horses now but there's bound to be someplace with organic hay bales for sale.
When my horses had bots one time, the vet treated with ivermectin to prevent colic and the vet always said, if there's any viral respiratory thing going on, this will also take care of that. They always used it as an anti-viral treatment. Of course, if the infection was bacterial they doctored them with antibiotics.
I’ve raised horses, cattle, goats, sheep, chickens, Guinnies, turkeys, dogs, cats, hamsters, snakes, fish, etc. and never had one expire from cancer
Weird, I've hardly seen any cat or dog that didn't develope some cancer into late adulthood.
Two of my dogs died of cancer. It takes them out pretty quick, like within months of diagnosis. One was soft tissue sarcoma, and the other was bone cancer.
Edit - but then again all my dogs got all their shots/vaccines in the past. I have two dogs now that have gotten the shots they were "supposed" to get, one is 4 yr old and the other is 1 yr. We won't be giving them all the shots anymore. They will get their heartworm prevention & maybe rabies (maybe!, they don't come around anything that could give them rabies, but never say never, we live in the south & in the county), probably won't give them kennel cough either, though they go for walks & visit the pet store (occasionally) they will never be bordered, if we have to leave them, either family or friend will watch them at our home.
I never tested positive for Coldvid either. Of course I never put that shit up my nose either. How would you know if one of the mouse hunters in the barn had lung cancer? How would I find out if my 17 yo rabbit dog has cancer?
Yep, they get yearly vaccines too at least rabies. While farm animals get vaccines too, they are regularly treated for parasites.