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Lost one this Morning
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<blockquote data-quote="J Hoy" data-source="post: 1756522" data-attributes="member: 16398"><p>Dear Hippy Rancher,</p><p></p><p>I thought I should give you the data, and numbers for how may total animals were examined to determine prevalence of underbite, overbite or normal bite that you asked for. The data for our study from 1996 through 2010 are on page 5 of the attached study and I put on the data collected by a biologist on hunter-killed wild grazing animals that tells how many animals were examined and prevalences.</p><p></p><p>I didn't find the healing time on birds and mammals, especially youngsters to be hardly variable at all, in fact they all were very similar in healing time.</p><p></p><p>Here is a really great placebo effect on me when I used the Calc. Phos. I accidentally dumped boiling hot water on the back of all of the fingers on my right hand when I was canning. It hurt like the dickens and even though I ran cold water over my hand immediately, all of my fingers turned bright red and still hurt. I put a Calc. Phos. tablet in a few drops of water and put the liquid on all the area that was red on the back of my fingers. Then I finished processing the tomato juice I was working on. By the time I was done with the canning, the burned area had stopped hurting at all and I could even wash the canning stuff in fairly warm water without my fingers hurting. I put the same Calc. Phos. liquid on my fingers right before going to bed, so it would be there all night without getting washed off. The next morning, I expected blistered skin on my fingers, like always happened before when I burned my hand, but my fingers were not even red any more and there was no blistering or even evidence that I had burned my fingers. I really like those placebo effects - LOL. That is why I keep trying the cell salts on various things. That is the only way to see what will happen. I have noticed that livestock owners try various things on their livestock and then share what works. I haven't seen any before and after x-rays posted, or even many before and after photos. </p><p></p><p>I do appreciate that you took time to read the study. </p><p></p><p>I guess that lots of people are observing the underbite or overbite on wild and domestic animals. Just type the name of a grazing animal, wild or domestic - underbite - images on Google for photos that are posted by all the people that observed and photographed an underbite (underdeveloped premaxillary bone or upper jaw bone on an animal). Or type the name of an animal species - overbite - images or just Dork Deer on Google for photos of animals with overbite (underdeveloped lower jaw bone forward of the premolars). It is quite obvious that people are seeing the jaw malformations all over the United States and the rest of North America. My veterinarian friends also see domestic animals with jaw malformations. One veterinarian in Mexico wrote a book, which he sent to me, about the high number of jaw malformations he was seeing on the cattle he worked with where he lives in Mexico. I hope this answers all of your questions. Thanks again for your interest.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="J Hoy, post: 1756522, member: 16398"] Dear Hippy Rancher, I thought I should give you the data, and numbers for how may total animals were examined to determine prevalence of underbite, overbite or normal bite that you asked for. The data for our study from 1996 through 2010 are on page 5 of the attached study and I put on the data collected by a biologist on hunter-killed wild grazing animals that tells how many animals were examined and prevalences. I didn't find the healing time on birds and mammals, especially youngsters to be hardly variable at all, in fact they all were very similar in healing time. Here is a really great placebo effect on me when I used the Calc. Phos. I accidentally dumped boiling hot water on the back of all of the fingers on my right hand when I was canning. It hurt like the dickens and even though I ran cold water over my hand immediately, all of my fingers turned bright red and still hurt. I put a Calc. Phos. tablet in a few drops of water and put the liquid on all the area that was red on the back of my fingers. Then I finished processing the tomato juice I was working on. By the time I was done with the canning, the burned area had stopped hurting at all and I could even wash the canning stuff in fairly warm water without my fingers hurting. I put the same Calc. Phos. liquid on my fingers right before going to bed, so it would be there all night without getting washed off. The next morning, I expected blistered skin on my fingers, like always happened before when I burned my hand, but my fingers were not even red any more and there was no blistering or even evidence that I had burned my fingers. I really like those placebo effects - LOL. That is why I keep trying the cell salts on various things. That is the only way to see what will happen. I have noticed that livestock owners try various things on their livestock and then share what works. I haven't seen any before and after x-rays posted, or even many before and after photos. I do appreciate that you took time to read the study. I guess that lots of people are observing the underbite or overbite on wild and domestic animals. Just type the name of a grazing animal, wild or domestic - underbite - images on Google for photos that are posted by all the people that observed and photographed an underbite (underdeveloped premaxillary bone or upper jaw bone on an animal). Or type the name of an animal species - overbite - images or just Dork Deer on Google for photos of animals with overbite (underdeveloped lower jaw bone forward of the premolars). It is quite obvious that people are seeing the jaw malformations all over the United States and the rest of North America. My veterinarian friends also see domestic animals with jaw malformations. One veterinarian in Mexico wrote a book, which he sent to me, about the high number of jaw malformations he was seeing on the cattle he worked with where he lives in Mexico. I hope this answers all of your questions. Thanks again for your interest. [/QUOTE]
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