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The Corroboree

waterboy 2.0

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Posts posted by waterboy 2.0

  1. Yes I have Alc, should have mentioned it. Nope, zero effect. The force is strong. 

     

    Benadryl as well was trialed but that just munts her down. She is supposed to be a busy dog:wink:

     

    Then the vets further suggestions are more severe chemical muntings that seriously mess/"mask" with her personality. 

     

    Dietary changes have been trialed as well. "raw" diet exacerbates her behavior which surprised me

     

    She's a lovely, loyal dog, crazy brave.... Just stresses herself stupid....The  breed combo is defo a factor. Probably the most intelligent dog I've had about. 

     

    Will also note, when we are all completely off property and she can hear the vehicle has gone she will settle down and relax on watching trail cam video. 

     

    Me dropping a couple times(and unresponsive for a bit)  when a true puppy really probably entrenched a bit of this. She really loves the shit outta me... Lol... 

     

    It may end up being that this is the nature of things, and that's fine it's not bothering neighbors ect... Just 

     

     

     

    • Like 1
  2. Not often I've read any animal angled material here or elsewhere. 

     

    I will slowly add to this thread, link some references and my approach, and how things are panning out. 

     

    The only "issues"  I have come across is the claim in one study of ataxia in male wistar rats with extract, with  antidepressant activity. The second is using unfermented raw material with wistar rats which displayed a reduced physiological stress response but produced inflammatory responses. 

     

    Cats and dogs have been examined at dosage ranges of 100mg/kg and 10mg/kg twice daily of milled material respectively with no adverse effects.

     

    Wistar rats in another oral toxicity study at 14 and 90 day durations have been observed to have no adverse effects with extract at levels up to 5000mg/kg daily(14 dys) and 600mg/kg daily (90 dys). 

     

    Why am I looking at this? :wink:

    Many dogs can suffer from anxiety, separation anxiety is one common facet with some breeds being more prone. 

     

    After the death of our older dog, the "pup" has really amplified her separation anxiety... Lol... Particularly with me... Yeah I be numba one. 

     

    Examples include making sure I'm breathing when I've gone down with fatigue on the couch(are you dead?) and getting up in my face. If asleep I'll get a light paw tap on my face to get a response. 

     

    Manically barking at me on returns home.... Even short periods. ("berating" bark). The others in the family get this to a lesser degree. 

     

    Highly territorial, strong guarding instinct .. Lol... I'll pity the fool that may poke around unannounced come nightfall. Very keen hunting instinct. 

     

    Constant "sooking"  when I'm outside the house yard doing something and have left her inside it. Previously she would break out and find me in the scrub, but now has established that that is not OK. 

     

    Occasionally digging, not often buy when it does occur its a decent excavation. 

     

    Gets a heap of exercise, lots of room, heaps of things to chew on ect... Loads of stimulation. Less socialized than desirable though, obedient but strong willed. 

     

    Would happily be a lap dog... Lol

     

    She's a crossbreed and currently entire, German short-haired pointer x border collie.... 

    (some are laughing... Yeah WB that might do it:lol:) . 

     

    So I have a dog capable of running down and taking down a deer, with the intelligence to do it in the most efficient manner. 

     

    But if I'm not about.. Lol... She stresses out. When the family is home and I'm out, she is pining and constantly  alert for my return .  It's quite manic at times. 

     

    Interesting enough the smell of fermented skelly is extremely attractive to her. I'll presume it's the "salty" smell it has. 

     

    If I have any in my pocket /backpack she is at it. So a few days back I pulled out a tin to chew on a bit and the dog is up on it.... Hmm.... So I dabbed my thumb in an held it out, and the stuff was gone... Lol... Just a dusting on my thumbprint. 

     

    Few hours later the already energetic dog has established a new personal best for laps around the house... Lol.. Later in the evening much more settled, rather than the constant vigilance to guarding. 

     

    Following day... Less needy, less noise,  anxiety appears to  be reduced. 

     

    Rinse and repeat for  three more days, and there appears to be some difference to the severity of the separation anxiety. 

     

    So.... Ima gunna drug her... Lol:wink:

    I'll start establishing a weighted dose and  do 30 days and assess again. 

     

    Fermented material, ground, sprinkled onto the morning feed. Initially I was thinking morning dosed as the initial increase in activity is quite noticeable.. Lol....

     

    I am reading that 10mg/Kg milled dry kanna twice daily in food  is well tolerated by canines with no identified adverse effects* (very comprehensive testing and monitoring). 

     

    This is where I will be starting this trial.... I'm hoping it can be used for a period to break some behaviors, but currently i am not adverse to ongoing maintenance use if well tolerated. 

     

     

    * Hirabayashi, M., Ichikawa, K., Fukushima, R., Uchino, T., Shimada, H., 2002. Clinical
    application of South African tea on dementia dog. Japanese Journal of Small
    Animal Practice 21, 109–113(in Japanese) 

     

     

     

    • Like 3
  3. Make a perfect seed bed over nicely cultivated soil.  Well raked to a fine tilth, free of stone, loose organics. 

     

    Slug control before all else if there are refuges.... They are magnets

     

    Lightly feed the cabbage (to much invites mildew) , change ferts when they get to "hook" stage. 

     

    If mildew sets its time to rotate out the paddock for a long time.  The new virulent downy mildew is soil persistent AF and easily moved about by seed. Which is well worth noting. 

     

    Overcrowding promotes mildew, and poor root development. Which is what they are all about at first. 

     

    Notes from the broad acre guys. 

    • Like 4
  4. See this is where your confounding the problem. Your raising a raft of issues there..... 

     

    Lol... I've killed more shit than you can imagine, and humans are just another animal IMO :wink: lol... You haven't got me pinned matey.... Don't kid yourself. 

     

    You can be an argumentative arse all you like, your opinion ain't gospel,nor is mine. 

     

    Also never said there was a fix.. . 

  5. You know....  maybe work on the actual problem of fixed carbon becoming free atmospheric carbon. 

    Edit - and the other turbo charged gases

     

    That's a change to business as usual. Then accomodate sequestration into development works. 

     

    The "western" model as aspirational it is has a lot of room left to improve its performance sustainability wise. 

     

    It's not rocket science :wink:

     

    Yep... Lol... "Sane" people wanna go culling folk who are not them. 

     

    • Like 1
  6. 7Zh2Eif.jpg

     

    However playing the population numbers game hides the real impacts of emissions per capita.... Not the number of kids any demographic/"race" has... 

     

    But it's another justification for inaction by some... Can't slay half the world.. Lol. Personally I think the Thanos solution is a crock of shit in regards to the current carbon balance (the issue) . Most likely help relieve several other enviro problems though pretty quickly :wink:

     

    It's an individuals choice to accept, deny, do shit or surrender.... We are all gunna have to adapt regardless, and pay one way or another. 

     

    • Like 2
  7. Our oceans broke heat records in 2018 and the consequences are catastrophic

    Rising temperatures can be charted back to the late 1950s, and the last five years were the five hottest on record

     
     

    Bleached coral in Guam

    Last year was the hottest ever measured, continuing an upward trend that is a direct result of manmade greenhouse gas emissions.

    The key to the measurements is the oceans. Oceans absorb more than 90% of the heat that results from greenhouse gases, so if you want to measure global warming you really have to measure ocean warming.

    There are other ways to measure climate change, but none are as convincing as the oceans. Air temperatures are most commonly reported in the media as evidence of global warming, but the problem with these is they are very erratic. While there is certainly a long-term trend of higher air temperatures, any given year may be warmer or colder than the last.

    So oceans are key, and they are telling us a clear story. The last five years were the five hottest on record. The numbers are huge: in 2018 the extra ocean heat compared to a 1981-2010 baseline amounted to 196,700,000,000,000,000,000,000 joules. The current rate of ocean warming is equivalent to five Hiroshima-size atomic bombs exploding every second.

    The measurements have been published in the journal Advances in Atmospheric Sciences in an article by Lijing Cheng, the lead author, and his colleagues from the Institute for Atmospheric Physics in China. His collaborators, of which I am one, included researchers from around the world. The article charts ocean heat back to the late 1950s, showing a steady increase.

    Ocean warming is incontrovertible proof of global warming, and there are real consequences to a warming ocean. Firstly, warmer water expands, and this expansion causes sea levels to rise. Approximately a third of the rise in ocean waters is a result of the heat absorbed by the oceans. Scientists expect about one metre of sea level rise by the end of the century, which would be enough to displace 150 million people worldwide.

    The warming waters also make storms more powerful. In the US recently, we have seen hurricanes pass over extremely warm ocean waters, which has supercharged them and increased the damage they cause. Other kinds of storms are also being made stronger. Heavier downpours of rainfall are increasing flooding around the world. Simply put, our emissions of greenhouse gases have caused loss of life and property. We are all responsible, but the people who have denied the science and the solutions own a special responsibility that history will judge harshly.

    It isn’t just humans that are suffering and will suffer more in the future. The heating of oceans is causing tremendous problems for sea life, particularly coral reefs. If we continue to warm the planet, we can expect to lose much of these reefs. We can also anticipate reductions in fish and sea life populations.

    We scientists sound like a broken record. Every year we present the science and plead for action. Not nearly enough is being done. We can still tackle climate change, but we must act immediately. We have the means to make a difference, we lack only the will.

     

    https://www.theguardian.com/environment/climate-consensus-97-per-cent/2019/jan/16/our-oceans-broke-heat-records-in-2018-and-the-consequences-are-catastrophic?CMP=Share_iOSApp_Other

     

     

     

     
    • Like 3
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