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sandgrubber

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Everything posted by sandgrubber

  1. It is easily available but discussion of its use on the forum is inappropriate. Not only because giving a dose as a volume per kg without reference to be concentration of the liquid is meaningless if not potentially extremely dangerous, but also because the use of parasiticde treatments are covered by a legislated restraint which means that the instructions applied to them on the label cannot be altered unless authorised by legislation. An exemption applies to a registered veterinary surgeon to alter the instructions for well accepted uses where an acceptable registered alternative does not exist or is not practical - using ivermectin off label to treat demodectic mange - yes, using it to save money on heartworm prevention, no. As an aside related to the commonly discussed 6 week interval, although it take several months for an adult heartworm to develop, juvenile worms can be present from as little as 52 days post infection. Yes, this is more than 42 days but it leaves only a small margin for error in dosing compared to the recommend monthly dosing. Oops! I thought I specified 1% solution. You're correct, it's wrong to specify a dosage without specifying the concentration. I'm correcting my post. There is lots of discussion and documentation available about tolerances. I like using the liquid because unlike tablets, where the same dosage is used for a 75 lb dog and a 150 lb dog, you can dose precisely by weight. Heartworm meds are a prescription medicine in the US and you must test annually to get your prescription renewed. Strange, cause you can buy all sorts of vaccines over the counter. Heartworm prevention can get quite expensive. People on limited income often loose their dogs to heartworm cause they can't easily afford the medication.
  2. This was posted locally along with an ad for Maremma pups -- strongly voicing the point that these pups were livestock guardians, not suitable for house pets. Thought some folks would find it amusing . . . maybe some others will be offended
  3. When I joined DOL Forums there were dozens of new posts a day and a lot of lively conversation. Seems like everything is lagging now. Only five topics got new entries in General yesterday. Is it just me, or has much of this site's traffic wandered off to social media or elsewhere?
  4. In the US, heartworm meds are prescription medicine and expensive, hence many of us simply buy Ivermectin for livestock and give it to our dogs monthly to bi-monthly. The dose most people use is 0.1 cc of 1% solution / 10 lbs . . . somewhat above the dosage in Heartguard tablets. Can you buy Ivermectin over the counter in feedstores in Oz? It seems to be a good solution. Note, I'm in Florida with a climate roughly equivalent to coastal QLD near the NSW border. We have a few mozzies year around, loads of 'em in spring, summer, and fall, and serious problems with heartworm in untreated dogs. edited to add concentration.
  5. Apparently this was a false report, encouraged by PITA, and the reality is more complex. Catholic doctrine on animals going to heaven seems to be ambiguous. See: http://factually.gizmodo.com/pope-francis-didnt-say-that-all-dogs-go-to-heaven-1671221288 bottom lines from the above article. The NY Times printed a long confusing retraction of the report. "Some outlets that re-reported the story from the New York Times even got statements from PETA, who applauded the Pope. "PETA Christian is deeply touched and encouraged that Pope Francis has acknowledged that other species are called along with human beings into eternal life with Christ," PETA Director of Christian Outreach and Engagement told Buzzfeed. So I guess if we've learned anything valuable from this story it's that PETA has a Director of Christian Outreach and Engagement. No word yet if they're still deeply touched and encouraged by the Pope now that the truth has come out. The battle over whether dogs (and people) have souls rages on." On the other hand, Francis did turn a report, begun by his predicessor, that had criticized US nuns for being overly liberal (ie, not spending sufficient time enforcing rules on contraception, etc.) to a report that praised them for compassion.
  6. Yup. Gun stuff in the US is scary. In Florida, where I live, they are now working on legislation to make it legal to carry concealed weapons on university campuses. Looks like it is going to pass because the gun lobby folks have convinced people that this will make things safer. The guys licensed to carry concealed weapons are supposed to prevent crime! To get a license you have to have no felonies, be over 21, and pass some rinky-dink gun safety course. Teaching kids to shoot is pretty common. Semi-automatics are all over the place. Not funny as it is, I have to laugh when a half-wit cop shoots himself in the foot.
  7. Personally, I believe we are all animals and as Benedict apparently said when an animal (human or otherwise) dies, it “just means the end of existence on earth.” But it's good to see people who believe in Heaven allowing for dogs to go there too. If there is a heaven and dogs aren't allowed, I don't want to go :) I've met a lot more evil people than evil dogs.
  8. If I were to choose a breed for average temperament, I'd get a flattie . .. .They stand out as the extreme for playful, sociable, and fearlessness in Svartberg's benchmark study of breed temperament. (see attached table, source noted on attachment. This was a huge study . . . something like 15000 dogs put through a standardized behavioral test).
  9. Good to see this coming from the Vatican! The harsh, judgemental positions past Popes have taken have left a bad taste in my mouth. Francis seems much more Christian, in the good sense of the word. Not just in this. His "who am I to judge" comment about homosexuality was the last thing I would have expected to hear from a pope.
  10. I don't want pretend resistance - I want actual resistance. Should be detectable with a titre test even. There's plenty of medicine that works and can be shown to work with double blind study - and they still don't understand how / why it works. So the fact that it is not "fully understood" doesn't mean anything one way or the other. All the studies I've seen that do double blind studies on the performance of homeopathic remedies - show the same result as the control group - ie the one which did not get the "active" therapy. And that's pretty scary. Scientific studies routinely dismiss the concepts of homeopathic medicine, veterinary and otherwise. See, eg: http://skeptvet.com/Blog/2014/10/new-systematic-review-of-veterinary-homeopathy-still-no-reason-to-believe-it-works/ Quote from the above: "This systematic review emphasizes that even with the darkest of rose-colored glasses, it is impossible to see the scientific study of homeopathy as anything other than an utter failure to find real, meaningful benefits, and that the best thing medical researchers could do for patients, human and veterinary, is to give up on this failed idea and move on to more promising research."
  11. Timing on intestinal wormers for adult dogs is not critical. You haven't stated which intestinal wormer you are using, but most of them are pretty mild, so you could probably go onto it directly with no consequences. On the other hand, carrying a few intestinal worms for a few months won't hurt a healthy adult dog. I've had vets tell me that many adult dogs can shed intestinal worms with no treatment whatsoever.
  12. I have a dog on a low dosage of phenobarbital. It made her sleepy at first, but she developed tolerance in a few weeks and there have been no noticable effects since (now four years). Higher doses can have bad consequences for the liver (if my memory is correct).
  13. The victim could sue civilly for his pain and suffering. Although not a lot of point if the offender doesn't own anything or have the money to cover the compensation that could be awarded. Sad but true. I am guessing he could go for victim compensation from the state as well?? I think jail time is only appropriate if the person actually told their dogs to attack another person. Hefty fines are good! Justice for criminals is so hard to arrange. Jail time doesn't need to be long to send a message (at least to some people . .. but then, other people might brag about it). You can't get blood out of a turnip. If the guy doesn't have any money, he won't pay the fine anyway. Sigh!
  14. They are trained to multi-task. Hoever some focus on just the one facet of detection. This might interest you, sandgrubber. http://www.searchdogsuk.co.uk/forensic_search.html :) Thanks. Interesting website!
  15. Sure you can. Have you ever noticed black plastic boxes chained to shrubs outside feedstores, hardware stores and the like? The real problem with rat poison comes when the dog gets into the poison itself, not from eating killed mice or rats. That happens far too often according to my vet.
  16. I don't understand why they would have a dog specialize in blood. Surely, a dog is capable of learning blood detection on top of, say, ordinary tracking . . . or arson detection work.
  17. Would $13,000 even cover the medical costs? What about the time the poor guy is off work? Pain and suffering? Being mauled by a couple dogs is on the severe end of GBH. I'm glad to see the GBH charge stick. People are responsible for the actions of their dogs. But it would be good to see some jail time along with the fines. And it would be good if some of the fines went to victim compensation.
  18. I ran into this by accident. Not a problem I've faced but it looked like a great intro. Made me sad to see that it had only been viewed 13 times. Vets like this need to be encouraged! edited to make video show
  19. Shelf life of organic substances is highly dependent on temperature. Most oils are good for years if you keep them in a cold fridge; many will go off in a month or two in warm weather.
  20. No worse than charging $50 (or whatever) for Ivermectin based heartworm meds that would cost you a dollar or two if you bought the same drug in a form meant for cattle or goats. Big pharma routinely takes advantage of the love we have for our pets.
  21. The news story is incomplete and we don't know what happened. We don't know if the officer asked someone to control the dog. We don't know what body language went along with the barking. We don't know if the dog had any history. We don't know if the officer had a phobia of dogs or of pit bulls. We don't even know if the officer was trying to serve notice on the house where the dog was. But I'd say someone who shoots himself trying to shoot a dog is someone who shouldn't have a gun. In the video, the owner admits the dog was barking, but not that it was aggressive. Looks to me like a Hispanic ghetto area of Riverside . . . having a dog behind a robust fence is 'good practice' for such areas. Animal Control is generally glad not to have animals running loose.
  22. http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/04/calif-tv-station-films-dog-calmly-playing-with-kids-after-cop-shoots-himself-trying-to-kill-it/?onswipe_redirect=no California deputy accidentally shot himself while trying to kill a dog that he said was threatening his life on Wednesday, but video captured by a local television station later showed the animal much smaller than reported and peacefully playing with children. According to a Riverside County sheriff’s spokesperson, the deputy was serving an eviction notice at around 2 p.m. on Wednesday when a “large” dog tried to attack him, KCAL reported. “A dog came at the deputy in an aggressive manner,” Deputy Armando Munoz said, according to The Press-Enterprise. “The deputy, (attempting to defend himself) pulled his service weapon, shot one round, and injured himself in the leg.”
  23. Uhmmm? No one told that to my 10 yr old Lab.
  24. Good to see dog attack considered as GBH! Good to see a fine high enough to deter. It would be good if some of the $$ went to the old fellow. Strange journalism. The guy was attacked. Not just his leg. Hope he recovers well. That can't be taken for granted at 82.
  25. The science relating to desexing, age of desexing, and health is complex and not well resolved. This is a review of a recent study that compared the health records of desexed vs non-desexed Labradors and goldens based on a large number of vet-clinic health records. http://skeptvet.com/Blog/2014/07/potential-risks-of-neutering-and-age-at-neutering-for-godlen-retrievers-and-labrador-retrievers/ The confusing thing is that the risks appear to be different for goldies and Labs. And that's statistically significant. The comforting thing is that the differences aren't huge in any direction. It's not like your dog will be condemned to cancer or protected from cancer depending on whether or not neutered and, if neutered, at what age. It's more like the odds vary between 30% and 35%, depending on what treatment you follow. By in large it fits in the BFD category. Bottom line comes down to how you feel about it. If you don't like the idea of a true eunuch, who has developed without normal dose of male hormones, then go for a breeder who desexes early. If you don't like the idea, go elsewhere.
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