Jump to content

Hank DDB

  • Posts

    42
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Hank DDB

  1. Amino cal plus do a google search, can be used just to make sure your puppy is getting everything

    the diet stated gives plenty of calcium, it doesn't need a

    supplement.

    It can't hurt to make someone aware if a product that may be useful. You need to back off or reword your input because you are pissing me off.

  2. If you have carpet in your house and dogs are inside dogs, then you need to use paper bag in the vacuum and throw the bag into your wheely bin as soon as u finish. Or if u have a bagless u need to empty it into your wheely bin and then suck up some flea powder with the vacuum. If you don't do the previous mentioned the fleas will just get back out of the vacuum and into your house.

    Oooooooh if you have a bagless and do that, pleaaaaaaase wash your filters out after!

    Working for electrolux has given me a whole new set of nightmares and that just makes my skin crawl! :laugh:

    I understand , but you only need a small amount like a teaspoon full and it's not being done every time u vacuum, just when it is required

  3. If you have carpet in your house and dogs are inside dogs, then you need to use paper bag in the vacuum and throw the bag into your wheely bin as soon as u finish. Or if u have a bagless u need to empty it into your wheely bin and then suck up some flea powder with the vacuum. If you don't do the previous mentioned the fleas will just get back out of the vacuum and into your house.

  4. HankDDB you may not be aware that the collie breeds are sensitive to Ivermectin which is commonly used as an active ingredient in many insecticide treatments for animals. Collie owners need to be especially careful with their choice of flea treatment products.

    Ok thanks, I'm not sure how sensitive they are, but a friend of mine who is also a pest tech uses frontline on his collies and permethrin on their bedding etc. with no issues. And again thanks for the heads up!

  5. Thanks I've bathed them and used tea tree oil seems to be ok now with them being so sensitive to some products I like to try something else first they alway have garlic in there food as I make up rice chicken combo washed all the bedding and fle bombed just in case they are not riddled in them thankfully but I just didn't want it getting worse

    Flea bombs are a marketing product they are not really worth the $. Buy a liquid permethrin treatment and spray that around on carpet, dog beds, even the dogs, if you have nothing else to kill the fleas with, it is a synthetic pyre thyroid and is one of the safest cheaper chemicals available, It will only stay in the dog/human/mammal system for a max of 7 days if you accidentally get some on you, but it is very safe but not a safe as frontline. Permethrin is removed from system thru sweat, urination. .

  6. Just use frontline it is very safe. To explain in laymen terms - ok fleas go thru various stages of development to get from being a egg to becoming a adult flea, and frontline works by stoping fleas changing from stage to stage. Dogs and humans and cats, horses etc do not go thru metamorphism and therefore are not effected by the active ingredient and this is why frontline is very safe to use. There are many chemicals for sale that I would never ever ever use on my pets because they are carsonegenic are can cause cancer! There are even very popular human head lice treatments that have carsonegenic chemicals in them yes u read correctly!

    P.s Warning follow the instruction for frontline 100% do not do anything different, 100% or expect it to fail.

  7. Ok just a little info I am a qualified pest manager, I hold a cert 4 which is the highest level of formal qualifications in Australia, ok now to talk about Frontline, it will work and work extremely well. now this is the thing you absolutely need to follow the instruction 100% or you will cause the fleas to become immune to it or cause a failed treatment and your dog will still have a ongoing flea problem. I use frontline and have done so since it came out and I follow the instruction 100% and I have never ever had a failed treatment, so if frontline is not working for you, then you have either failed to follow the instructions correctly or you have a large infestation that requires additional treatment of the surrounding environment to speed up the flea kill. But frontline will in time kill all the fleas, it is just like termites, roaches, etc if there is a large infestation it is going to take longer to get rid of them all. So just persist with frontline and please please follow the instructions 100%. Please feel free to ask me anything relating to fleas or ticks, I can advise you of what to use and how to use it!.

  8. Sounds like you're giving this puppy an awful lot of supplements, have you considered letting him grow and build his own immune system for a while?

    It may sound like I'm giving this puppy an awful lot of supplements, Sorry I have no idea where u got that from, as I have not stated what I'm giving him! But FYI- He is on a raw diet Roo/Beef meat, specific selection of verges, and a professional supplement with every essential vit, min, amino, etc required, which is administered at the correct dose for a puppy, and I have just recently introduced these capsules to increase his stomach flora. P.s USA vets tend to be moving toward reducing unnessecary yearly vaccinations and increasing natural preventative methods such as the use of probiotics.

  9. Just thought I would post this info for anyone interested.

    Blackmores intestinal health capsules have both of the below ingredient and nothing else added. And can be purchased at local chemists for approx $32.00 for a bottle of 90 capsules.

    The contents of 1 x capsule per day is a good starting point and what im using, but from my research up to 10 a day is ok.

    B. animalis

    Probably the most studied probiotic strain in dogs is B. animalis. It has been demonstrated to reduce acute diarrhea, and improve overall intestinal health. However, most dog probiotic products do not contain this strain. We believe that over time all of the formulas will start containing B. animalis because of the vast research behind this strain.

    Vet Ther. 2009 Fall;10(3):121-30: Clinical benefits of probiotic canine-derived Bifidobacterium animalis strain AHC7 in dogs with acute idiopathic diarrhea.

    Commentary: In this study B. animalis on its own reduced the resolution time in half from 6 days to 3 in dogs. Vet Microbiol. 2009 Oct 20;139(1-2):106-12. Epub 2009 May 19.

    Portrait of a canine probiotic Bifidobacterium animalis, from gut to gut.

    (Excerpt)

    “Bifidobacterium animalis adhered to epithelial cells, transited the murine gastrointestinal tract to high numbers and significantly reduced S. typhimurium translocation. B. animalis consumption significantly reduced the carriage of Clostridia, in particular Clostridium difficile, in dogs. This study describes the isolation and screening of canine-derived bacterial strains with commensal traits. The results demonstrate that B. animalis has significant potential for improving canine gastrointestinal health.”

    Commentary: Clostridium difficile is the pathogen that primarily causes diarrhea. The fact that B.animalis has such a dramatic effect on C. difficile, makes it really the number one choice for dealing with acute diarrhea.

    L. acidophilus

    L. acidophilus as been show to be especially good with use in puppies. L. acidophilus was shown to increase weigh gain/growth in canines (Note it is thought that probiotics are critical in the puppy stage also for bolstering foundational immunity). Puppies supplemented L. acidophilus were found to display less symptoms of allergies and other diseases in older years..

  10. Is inner health plus ok for puppies and dogs ( powder from capsule). UPDATE please see below

    Blackmores intestinal health capsules have both of the below ingredient and nothing else added.

    B. animalis

    Probably the most studied probiotic strain in dogs is B. animalis. It has been demonstrated to reduce acute diarrhea, and improve overall intestinal health. However, most dog probiotic products do not contain this strain. We believe that over time all of the formulas will start containing B. animalis because of the vast research behind this strain.

    Vet Ther. 2009 Fall;10(3):121-30: Clinical benefits of probiotic canine-derived Bifidobacterium animalis strain AHC7 in dogs with acute idiopathic diarrhea.

    Commentary: In this study B. animalis on its own reduced the resolution time in half from 6 days to 3 in dogs. Vet Microbiol. 2009 Oct 20;139(1-2):106-12. Epub 2009 May 19.

    Portrait of a canine probiotic Bifidobacterium animalis, from gut to gut.

    (Excerpt)

    “Bifidobacterium animalis adhered to epithelial cells, transited the murine gastrointestinal tract to high numbers and significantly reduced S. typhimurium translocation. B. animalis consumption significantly reduced the carriage of Clostridia, in particular Clostridium difficile, in dogs. This study describes the isolation and screening of canine-derived bacterial strains with commensal traits. The results demonstrate that B. animalis has significant potential for improving canine gastrointestinal health.”

    Commentary: Clostridium difficile is the pathogen that primarily causes diarrhea. The fact that B.animalis has such a dramatic effect on C. difficile, makes it really the number one choice for dealing with acute diarrhea.

    L. acidophilus

    L. acidophilus as been show to be especially good with use in puppies. L. acidophilus was shown to increase weigh gain/growth in canines (Note it is thought that probiotics are critical in the puppy stage also for bolstering foundational immunity). Puppies supplemented L. acidophilus were found to display less symptoms of allergies and other diseases in older years..

  11. Awesome thanks everyone for the quick response, u have confirmed my gut instinct . :). Yesterday I gave him close to 7% of his current body weight simply because my gut feeling and experience gain from my previous puppies years ago was telling me that 2 to 4 % was not enough for him.

  12. I'm feeding my new puppy raw, and all info states to feed between 2 & 4 % of body weight , I understand this. My question is should I only allow him to eat a max of 4% in any given day or should I allow him to eat for a certain time frame, e.g let him eat as much as he can in 5 mins and then remove any food that he has not consumed?

×
×
  • Create New...