OK, I'm afraid I don't have any advice from an oils standpoint with a dog, but I'll give some good nutritional advice. I treat my own dogs naturally, and my husband and I healed his dog of a very serious case of demodectic mange when he moved in with us, and the symptoms are similar: foul odor, itchy/biting himself, missing patches of hair (in this case, 1/2 of his body). I will share what worked for us on that.
1. I feed my dogs meaty bones, the diet they were designed by nature to eat. We put him on this diet too. I've known it to cure many diseases and poor health conditions in dogs. They weren't designed to eat cereal, which is all any dry dog food is, really (along with a whole host of other nasty things I won't go into here).
2. We started giving him baths in Dr. Bonner's Tea Tree Oil soap and following that with a rinse of a mixture of hydrogen peroxide and Borax that we found on the internet (google mange), there's a whole protocol including frequency, which changes over the months).
3. We gave him lots of love. Emotional trauma is the cause of an outbreak of demodectic mange (it's a mite that lives w/o any problems on healthy dogs, and this is what triggers it to be a problem).
It took several months to clear up, and he still has one bald patch. We've been doing this since late September...but the changes in him are amazing, and it's been worth it.
Blessings,
~Rev. Diane Jarecki
-- ~Rev. Diane Jarecki
Reiki Master Teacher
Spiritual Teacher
Wellness Coach
724-513-0055
"This is my simple religion. There is no need for temples; no need for complicated philosophy. Our own brain, our own heart is our temple; the philosophy is kindness." ~Dalai Lama
"I expect to pass through life but once. If therefore, there be any kindness I can show, or any good thing I can do to any fellow being, let me do it now, and not defer or neglect it, as I shall not pass this way again." ~William Penn
On Fri, May 6, 2011 at 6:54 PM, Jill B. <jboat1220@gmail.com> wrote:
My neighbor's dog has yeast so bad, the worst case I have ever seen.
Her skin turns red and she bites on it constantly, plus my neighbor
can smell the odor of the yeast coming out on her. The poor dog (and
in turn, my neighbor) is miserable!! When she takes her to the vet
they just put her on anitbiotics and steroids which does clear it up
but then it quickly returns. Any advice on ridding poor Ruthie of her
yeast infection?
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