Parasite exposures are pretty much every where. If you think of how we work it out with our pets they get wormed periodically regardless of symptoms. If I see symptoms I may double dose or do a more thorough cleanse, as in my horses some can encyst in muscles and there is a five day double dosing regimen for a chemical wormer called Fenbendazole, that will kill these and indeed does result in a "bloom" on the horses after wards -- I do this once a year for them. For the dogs I worm periodically and if I see Tapeworms then I double dose and repeat in ten days, with Pyrantel.
There are many who use natural wormers on their horses and dogs. I have used Olive Leaf preventatively, feeding it a low levels each day, with my horses, but I still purge worm every 2-4 months depending on the time of year and condition / symptoms the animal is exhibiting. Mine are allergic to the migrating filariads of Onchocerca (Neck Threadworm) so I watch for symptoms of sensitivity -- these guys have a ten day life cycle so can build in numbers between regular wormings, more so in the summer than the winter, as the midge that spreds them dies in cold weather. So to for humans it is a matter of sensitivity and exposure, to determine how often to worm ourselves. What you eat, where and how you process your food determines some of your exposure. Whether you kiss your pets on the face, how often you wash your hands and fingernails (!), how much you touch your face with dirty hands etc. All are factors in what you load may be. As well as your internal health, how much mucous there is on your intestinal lining that protects the parasites that attach there. I get great results with Olive Leaf alone as a wormer. Although I have used various formulas. I buy Olive Leaf in bulk from www.oliviaspassion.com -- call and ask for it. Buy only European grown, domestic Olive Leaf is not as high in Oleuripein, and many are not what the label claims, Bluebonnet in particular I am sure of is not what it claims as I have used it and had to switch to Solar Ray to get the results I have come to know from high quality products. I know people that use CS to worm their horses and that is all they use. Without seeing the horses and running fecals on them it is hard for me to say. At some point the worms are single celled organisms but I don't know this is enough to say that CS will work on them. I don't know if they utilize the enzyme system for respiration that single celled pathogens known to be killed by silver use. It is this enzyme system that is thought to be inactivated by silver. I know I take silver every day and still occasionally see a tape worm, but tapes are one of the hardest parasites to kill. And probably one of the least harmful to their host. Garnet -- The Silver List is a moderated forum for discussing Colloidal Silver. Instructions for unsubscribing are posted at: http://silverlist.org To post, address your message to: [email protected] Silver List archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html Address Off-Topic messages to: [email protected] OT Archive: http://escribe.com/health/silverofftopiclist/index.html List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>

