T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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814.1 | Try Garlic | SALES::RFI86 | | Tue Oct 06 1987 12:30 | 7 |
| If you can get them to eat garlic this will keep the fleas off.
You can by garlic capsules that have garlic extract in them. If
you put this in thier food they should eat it. Then when they sweat
the garlic comes out through thier pores and the fleas and misquitos
stay away. I guess it's true that garlic keeps away vampires. Good
luck
Geoff
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814.2 | BREWER'S YEAST (SOMETIMES) SCATTERS FLEAS | HPSVAX::DERUSSO | | Tue Oct 06 1987 13:10 | 12 |
|
RE: 814
TRY BREWER'S YEAST TABLETS. THESE HAVE ALWAYS WORKED FOR MY CATS,
AND THEY LOVE THEM. I GIVE THEM THE TABLETS AS "TREATS" INSTEAD
OF COMMERCIAL "JUNK" TREATS THAT YOU BUY AT THE SUPERMARKET.
HOPE IT WORKS !
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814.3 | questions on .1 & .2 | TOPDOC::NAJJAR | | Tue Oct 06 1987 15:33 | 7 |
| Does anyone have further details on dosage (amounts) that
can be given, and how much is too much? If the brewer's yeast
is used, how many pills do you give a 10 lb cat and how many
mgs is that - are there any known side effects? For the garlic,
does this have any adverse effect on the cats? How much do you
give them and how often? Have your vets approved or disapproved
of either of these methods?
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814.4 | tested and approved | SALES::RFI86 | | Tue Oct 06 1987 15:38 | 3 |
| We give our cats one garlic capsule a day during the flea season.
Yes it was approved, even suggested, by a vet.
Geoff
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814.5 | Could be a real gas | SQM::MURPHY | Is it Friday yet? | Tue Oct 06 1987 17:47 | 7 |
| When I tried it with my cats (and dog) all it seems to do was give
them gas. I asked my vet about the brewers yeast/garlic tabs and
he said they've found no evidence that it works. He suggested I
stay with flea spray/powder and flea collars when not a kitten.
Good luck.
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814.6 | BREWER'S YEAST - THE WONDER TABLET! | HPSVAX::DERUSSO | | Fri Oct 09 1987 13:42 | 21 |
|
RE: .3
With regard to garlic. 1/2 clove chopped up is sufficient. Garlic
has absolutely no adverse effects. It purifys the blood.
Veterinarians, unless they are holistic in nature and into natural
healing, probably won't have any comment one way or the other.
But, I can tell you it does work!
Regarding brewer's yeast. Any health food store probably stocks
these and the tablets are around 7 1/2 grains each. Brewer's yeast
is chock full of B vitamins (vitamins which are water soluable,
so you needn't worry about toxicity). I give my Abys 2 or 3 tablets
a day -- It's a game with them. I roll them on the floor and they
attack the tablet before eating it. It's the live yeast, I'm sure.
And, their coats are magnificent, no fleas, and their appetites
are great!
Diane
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814.7 | DON'T GIVE UP ON BREWERS YEAST !! | HPSVAX::DERUSSO | | Fri Oct 09 1987 13:51 | 30 |
|
REF: .5
Fea collars are constantly emitting poisons to kill the fleas and
obviously this is being absorbed, to some extent, into the cats
pores. Brewers yeast takes time to be built up into the system.
Possibly 2 months.
And the garlic, over a period of time, does purify the blood. I
conducted by own personal analysis on my cats, and can attest to
its virtues.
Most veterinarians no little to nothing about holistic medicine,
and not only that but if we, as owners, turn to holistic means of
caring for our pets, we wouldn't need traditional veterinarians,
nor would we need gross chemical flea collars -- which would put
companies like Zodiac and Hartz Mountain out of business !!
For more info. on natural ways to care for you cat. . . .I highly
recommend the book "The Natural Cat" by Anitra Frazier. This can
be purchased from The Felix Company in Seattle, Washington. (Sorry,
I don't have the number) -- They're the company which manufactures
the "best scratching post made".
Diane
"PURRING IS MUSIC TO MY EARS"
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814.8 | YEAST AND GARLIC TESTIMONIAL | POSSUM::FAMULARO | Joe, ZK02-2/R94, DTN381-2565 | Fri Oct 09 1987 14:47 | 17 |
| Previous to using yeast/garlic tablets and/or powder we'd have to
have our cats dipped, powdered, bomb the house...etc. We've been
mixing the yeast and garlic powder with their food on a daily basis
for three years and have not had any flea problems since. It DOES
work and you can find the this stuff at many pet stores and health
food stores.
A secondary benefit of using this is that yeast is very high in
vitamin B, anti stress, nerve vitamin. One of my cats developed
a nerve problem that the vet tried to treat with drugs. The
drugs did not work. I realized that I had run out of the yeast
and garlic several weeks previous to this problem occuring. I bought
some and started mixing it back with their food. Three days later
the cat was back to his old self and has not had the problem since.
Good stuff!
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814.9 | Down-side of Collars | AQUA::GOLDMAN | Matt Goldman | Fri Oct 09 1987 18:48 | 16 |
| I'm surprised that no one has mentioned that most vets don't recommend flea
collars, especially the store bought variety, because that are not very
effective themselves!
Apparently, the formulas are not changed enough and/or quality control is not
very good, and the flea population becomes immune to them. As an example,
Marlboro Animal Hospital (MA) has the "higher grade" collars available but
discourages you from buying them. They of course point you to other flea
control products by the same companies! :^)
This is independent of the fact that the collar irritates many cats resulting
in lost fur around the neck area, and that it releases pesticides continuously
on the pet.
I don't know much about the yeast/garlic techniques mentioned here, but the
alternative doesn't seem any better.
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814.10 | bad breath???? | SYBIL::MACINTYRE | | Mon Oct 12 1987 10:21 | 6 |
| I've never heard of using brewer's yeast/garlic for fleas, but it
sounds terrific. A few questions... are they separate tablets/powders,
or is it a combo product? Does the cat's breath smell like garlic
(like mine does if I eat garlic)?
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814.11 | NO GARLIC BREATH | POSSUM::FAMULARO | Joe, ZK02-2/R94, DTN381-2565 | Tue Oct 13 1987 13:44 | 12 |
| The product comes in both tablet and powder form. Use the one that
you find works best for your pet. I use the powder form since one
of my three did not like chewing the tablet. The other two liked
them as treats and would come running when I shook the jar. So each
feeding I just mix a tablespoon or so in with their wet food and they
chow it down.
There is no smell you'll be able to detect either in their breath
or body odor.
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814.12 | Anyone ever hear of a flea product called Hop-Off? | BEING::PETROVIC | Looking for a simpler place & time... | Tue Aug 16 1988 14:19 | 20 |
| re: Garlic extract/Brewer's yeast
I just got a brochure on a product called 'Hop-Off' from the
local pet shop. It goes on to explain the benefits of the
organic approach to ridding your pet of fleas. From what I've
read in this conference (this note) you all seem to believe that
this works.
I'm at my wit's end with the fleas on Shadow and Oreo (longhair
and shorthair 'Alley' types). Bathing/powdering, etc isn't
effective. They are miserable and I want to stop it.
Hop-Off comes in a 16 oz bottle for about $9 and can be
administered either by dosing the food or by eyedropper. The
paper says that it's about 90% effective, causing the fleas to
not want to live on their hosts.
Any of you heard of the product? Is it worth a shot?
Chris
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814.13 | no fleas on mine. | SALEM::NOYCE | | Wed Aug 17 1988 14:31 | 10 |
| The flea collar works well for us. We generally buy
one every spring for the cat and dog and have never had
a problem with fleas and ticks on either animal. They
don't bring fleas in the house with them and they don't
appear to suffer any ill effects from the collars. The
dog is 10 years old and the cat is 6 and they both spend more than
50% of their time outside. I don't do cats with long
claws in bathtub situations!!
My 2 cents worth.
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814.14 | | SUBURB::TUDORK | Kate n' IT | Thu Aug 18 1988 08:54 | 19 |
| I agree with 814.13 - we tried powder (didn't work), sprays (cruel
because the cats were terrified) so all that was left was either
shampoo or flea collars.
Because I'm rather attached to living I thought we'd try the collars
first and after a bit of preliminary sulking the cats have got used
to them and the fleas have gone.
814.12 - even if you do use this organic stuff you will still have
to buy a chemical spray to do all the places in the house where
your pets sleep, skirting boards etc otherwise they'll just be
re-infested. I believe fleas can lay dormant for up to 2 years
- accurate info anyone?
Regards
Kate
UK
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