I have a friend in New York who goes to North Carolina every year to
get visit the perelandra place - she loves their remedies.
Gloria
On Nov 10, 2007, at 12:08 PM, Marylyn wrote:
I haven't followed a lot of this but did ask one of my holistic
vets about essences. She prefers Perelandra (www.perelandra-
ltd.com ) over Bach. I have included the website in case you want
to check it out. I know I will be since I am hooked on Bach right
now.
Good luck.
If you have men
who will exclude any of God's creatures
from the shelter
of compassion and pity, you will have men who
will deal likewise
with their fellow man.
St. Francis
----- Original Message -----
From: laurieskatz
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Friday, November 09, 2007 12:14 PM
Subject: Re: We are having issues
THANK-YOU UU, I have these issues here and have been at my wit's end.
Laurie
----- Original Message -----
From: Unusually Unique
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Friday, November 09, 2007 10:01 AM
Subject: Re: We are having issues
I'm new here but I think I might be able to help. I was having a
similiar issue with my kids. Waco, 9 yr old siamese who we are
pretty sure is FeLV+ started getting real aggressive with 2 of my
other weaker, sick cats. Yota, 8 yr old siamese, FeLV+ and Jake,
14 yr old orange tabby with an injured paw. I've been doing a lot
of research into holistic treatments of FeLV because I had 2 vets
tell me there is nothing that can be done for Yota (lympathic
leukemia). I was at Good Earth (the natural/herb store) and was
talking with a very nice sales lady and I happened to mention
Waco's aggressive behavior. She suggested using a flower essense
called "Vine Essence". According to the book we were looking at it
helps with "domination" issues. It helps cats who feel the need to
pick on weaker, sick or smaller cats. She suggested putting it in
their water or diliuting it and rubbing it on their ears when
getting some luvs from you. She also told me that it would not
affect the other cats if I put it in their water. The essenses
only affect the one with "issues". I also found an article that
might help you if this is something your considering :http://
findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0ISW/is_2002_June/ai_86387597 .
All I know is that I used it and it worked. Now when Waco starts
playing "I AM ALPHA CAT" I either rub some on his ears or put a
couple of drops in his liquid vitamins and all that goes in a
dropper straight down the hatch! And I hate to say this but you
might have Penelope checked out. She could be sick or having
issues your not aware of yet. Usually the alpha cats will harrass
the weak or sick. Out in the wild these animals would be killed by
the alpha. Just something to think about.
Also, I was wondering what if any kind of treatments are you giving
your FeLV+ cat?
----- Original Message ----
From: "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: felvtalk@felineleukemia.org
Sent: Thursday, November 8, 2007 7:56:13 PM
Subject: We are having issues
Ok, guys. I hope someone can figure this situation out, because
I'm at my wit's end. Two of my girls are NOT getting along, and I
don't know what to do. Penelope (FeLV negative, 2 years old, very
standoffish personality, not a "friendly" type cat, doesn't want to
be held, only wants attention when SHE wants it, a loner, etc) and
Grizzabella (FeLV positive, 7 years old, very friendly, never met a
stranger, not so much a lap cat, but doesn't mind being petted and
isn't afraid of strangers at all) are constantly at each other. :
( They never really "liked" each other, but the last few months it
has gotten progressively worse. To the point that Penelope is
afraid to come out of the bedroom. She was pooping/peeing under
the bed. And I know it was just because she was afraid of
Grizzabella and wouldn't come out of the bedroom. We finally had
to put a litterbox in there for her, and food/water.
What I have noticed is they seem to attack each other, depending on
their mood, but one always jumps the other. They can't even pass
in the hall without fighting, and I don't know what to do. There
doesn't seem to be any precursor/cuase. All it seems to take is
one of them seeing the other and they're off. I'm really worried
Bella is going to end up scratching Penny and infecting her. Right
now when they start I just put Bella in the guestroom for a few
hours so Penelope can come out of the bedroom, and then when we
leave of the morning I let Bella out and Penelope spends the day in
the bedroom. Any of you guys had any success with behavior
modification? I welcome any thoughts/ideas on what has worked for
you guys in the past. Poppy, the third one in the house proper,
gets along with both of them, for the most part. I've seen Poppy
jump Penny a time or two, but certainly nothing like the other
two. :( Penny and Poppy do well together most of the time (they
both sleep in my bed at night). Any ideas?
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