Perhaps we are getting back to the same old finding that CS is relatively ineffective when not in a liquid or surface. Maybe the contents of the stomach are more like mush or gelatin which drops the effectiveness tremendously, until it can get into the blood stream.
Marshall "Dean T. Miller" wrote: > Hi Trem, > > On Fri, 16 Aug 2002 11:57:12 -0700, "Trem" <[email protected]> wrote: > > >We give our horse 12 ounces orally a day. He weighs 1000 pounds. He > >doesn't get any infections and his feces are normal. The thing about a > >horse is, they have to defecate on average every 2 hours and an observant > >owner will be able to tell right away if something's wrong by looking at the > >stool. His is completely normal. > > > >Sure you weren't thinking of ruminants? > > No, because I know for sure that you don't let ruminants drink CS. I > know a horse isn't a ruminant, but it does have lots of bacteria in > it's gut (stomach?) to digest it's food. I figured that if CS was > used via an IV for equine encephalitis (mentioned in a message), that > they didn't care to provide CS orally for some reason. > > -- Dean -- from (almost) Des Moines -- KB0ZDF > > -- > The silver-list is a moderated forum for discussion of colloidal silver. > > Instructions for unsubscribing may be found at: http://silverlist.org > > To post, address your message to: [email protected] > > Silver-list archive: http://escribe.com/health/thesilverlist/index.html > > List maintainer: Mike Devour <[email protected]>

