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Flea and Tick Repellent For Your Dog
Directions: Cook hamburger meat in skillet until browned, set aside to cool. Combine egg, garlic, and brewer's yeast. Add to hamburger meat, stir until blended well. Feed to Dog. Note: They love it! Use once a month to control fleas and ticks. By DeAnn C. Feedback About This Post:RE: Flea and Tick Repellent For Your DogI happened upon this post when looking for info on giving raw eggs to dogs. First - the concensus on the net thus far is:raw eggs are unhealthy for domesticated pets. Fish oil is a better source of added fat. Second - onions, never - garlic, yes in small amounts. If you will read the label on commercially prepared foods(a good idea anyway) you will find many contain garlic. Three - the brewer's yeast does work on dogs and cats - with or without the hamburger as it is also available in a chewable tablet which a lot of dogs will readily take like a treat. The key to effectiveness is to find out through trial and error how much it takes and how often it's needed in order to control the fleas. Just be prepared. It doesn't work instantly with the first dose. Your pet has to get it in his/her system plus, while your pet adapts to the brewer's yeast he/she will have gas - very odorous - but this too will pass. Post By Guest (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellent For Your DogI happened upon this post when looking for info on giving raw eggs to dogs. First - the concensus on the net thus far is:raw eggs are unhealthy for domesticated pets. Fish oil is a better source of added fat. Second - onions, never - garlic, yes in small amounts. If you will read the label on commercially prepared foods(a good idea anyway) you will find many contain garlic. Three - the brewer's yeast does work on dogs and cats - with or without the hamburger as it is also available in a chewable tablet which a lot of dogs will readily take like a treat. The key to effectiveness is to find out through trial and error how much it takes and how often it's needed in order to control the fleas. Just be prepared. It doesn't work instantly with the first dose. Your pet has to get it in his/her system plus, while your pet adapts to the brewer's yeast he/she will have gas - very odorous - but this too will pass. Post By Guest (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellent For Your DogDO NOT EVER feed your dog Garlic....Garlic & Onions are toxic to them!...also NEVER feed your dog a raw egg as it may contain salmanilla! Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellent For Your Dogcan u give a dog garlic pills for humans???? Post By Amanda (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellent For Your Dog
To the poster who said that YEAST was bad for dogs, and generally misread the link they were posting: Post By Are You Kidding? (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellent For Your DogDogs do not sweat. Post By Will (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellant For Your DogYou really shouldn't cook the hamburger, very bad for the dog. Uncooked, raw meat is the best thing you can do for the dog & cat - all of the time. Also helps keep fleas off, and parasites (worms). Raw meat keeps dogs intestinal walls free of mucous, when that's gone parasites can't live because the mucous is what they feed on. Dogs never had cooked meats in the wild. They need the nutrients, bone, marrow, etc. for their health from the meat. Also, don't feed them cooked bones - they splinter. Post By Sherry (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellant For Your Dog
We have lots of pets and when the kids were small I needed to get rid of fleas in the house but I was concerned about the flea poison around my baby. I went to the library and learned of what I now call ''The One Two Condiment Punch for Pets"... Salt and Pepper! When fleas eggs hatch the embryo is a tiny microscopic soft boddied MAGGOT! YUCK! If you sprinkle salt over the carpet, sofa etc. the salt grains will work their way down through the carpet to the padding and when the tiny flea maggots touch it ... Well have you ever salted a slug? They die and dry up, breaking the life cycle and ending the infestation. Simply sprinkle a little more salt out after each vaccuming. The only problems I have ever had with this is it can be a little gritty and during one especially hot humid summer there was some dampness in the carpet due to the salt drawing out moisture from the air. But, NO MORE FLEAS! Salt is cheap, safe, and does not stink. I have even used it on my hardwood floors, but then again my floors are scuffed up and not in too good of shape to begin with. It may damage yours. Remember you CAN NOT salt your yard ...unless you NEVER want GRASS again! And you can NOT salt your pet... just the house. Post By Sheryl (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellant For Your DogI read somewhere that garlic eaten frequently by cats could cause a nutrient deficiency which could be fatal to the cats. I don't know if this is true. I would ask a vet before doing this for cats. I have heard several places that it is OK for dogs. Still I have asked my vet about feeding this to my dogs and he would rather sell me the expensive flea meds! Post By guest (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellant For Your Dog
I'm not sure about ticks, but I do know that garlic is what repels fleas. Several years ago we had a huge flea problem on our dogs, and the vet gave us garlic pills and had us give them to the dogs once a week. Supposedly, the dogs excrete the garlic when they sweat, and the fleas find this offensive and stay off. Sprinkling garlic powder on their food will give the same desired results. But this only works in the summer when it is hot as the dogs have to sweat. I understand this works for cats as well. Post By Teri (Guest Post) RE: Flea and Tick Repellant For Your Dog
Please be careful about what is put in your pet's food. Here is a website with a list of things you should avoid feeding your dog. Post by Anonymous RE: Flea and Tick Repellant For Your Dog
Would this recipe also provide flea Post By Barbara (Guest Post) |
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