> From: sol <[email protected]>

> Just a comment....a quart isn't much for a horse. 

****** We originally came up with a quart by extrapolating how much CS was 
recommended for human consumption (1 oz., according to the fellow who first 
introduced me to CS) and then multiplying that by a ten-fold factor for the 
difference in weight between an average human and an average horse.  
Originally, my horse was only getting one cup per feeding.  Later I doubled it 
because I learned that these measurements were very conservative.  Also, two 
cups is about as much liquid as an ordinary measure of feed can handle/absorb 
without just pouring water into the horse's feed trough.

>If my memory serves, I believe Trem of Silvergen has posted (here?) that he 
>gives his horses a 
> quart a day as preventive. Don't know how much he would give them if one 
> contracted EPM but you could email him and ask.

****** Trem and I have exchanged information on the subject of CS for horses, 
many years ago. 
 
> I also don't know how much EIS a horse can have before the GI bacteria 
> in the cecum begins to be adversely affected, have you got any idea?

**** I don't know -- but it's something that has never occurred, as far as I 
know.  The quantity of a quart just seems to work, both in application and 
results.  MA



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