It won't make them eat but it's just so they have some type of nutrients in them. The chicken Broth I didn't try giving it to her until the 4th day which is also when I started giving her the nutri-cal I made sure I gave her the broth first then the nutri-cal I would only feed her a tablespoon of the broth 3x a day just to see if she could hold it down. Man this was a tough one I only gave her a tablespoon of it I was pretty grossed out by it but I was doing whatever could get my dog back to health.
I tried this but I felt like it didn't help I've read stories of other where it has worked but I'm just throwing what I experienced with at home with my pup, so it might work for yours but I suggest you do it if you see they're some what holding things down. Last but not least, The Activated Charcoal.
I was reading about this back and forth. Repeat rows 1 and 2 until there are 43 57, 80 stitches on the needle. K1, P1, evenly until work measures the required length from neck to base of tail. K1, P1 14 18, 25 stitches and place these on the stitch holder. Bind off the next 15 21, 30 stitches for neck opening. K1, P1 to the end of the row. These 14 18, 25 stitches will form the first shoulder.
Shoulder Shaping K1, P1 to the last 2 stitches. Knit or Purl the last 2 stitches together as per pattern. Work in rib pattern until work measures about 2 3, 5 inches from the bound off stitches at the neck edge. With Right side facing pattern to the last 2 stitches K2 together. Purl 2 together pattern to the end of the row.
I found this fascinating when I realized. They do not break down very easily. We had only been living in this house a couple of weeks and had not yet met anyone in our subdivision. I was in the back yard and stepped on some of the gum balls that were hidden in the grass, lost my footing, landing hard on my rump….. I looked up and saw a neighbor smiling…..
I only remember how painful it was and the embarrassment. I hated mine, until I learned about its medicinal value. I am going to try a mower with a bag attachment this year. I have seen websites dedicated to finding uses for the horrible spiny balls. Here are few ideas: Believe it or not, I even saw someone that wanted to buy sweet gum balls! Perhaps we could market them???
If we could, We could become Rich in a very short time! We live in the rolling hills of the piedmont in SC, and the Sweet Gum tree is very prolific here. It takes a lot of practice to walk the hilly trails, especially in the fall, when the dry leaves add to the challenge of rollerskating on gumballs, LOL. But, to the question: Is it possible to recycle sweet gum balls? They balls are also used in crafts, and I have seen them dipped in metallic paint and used as ornaments.
So, all you have to do is to box them up and put them for sale on EBay. I put the seed pods around a shrub and it killed the shrub. Are the seed pods toxic? I would like to add them to my compost pile? Good idea or bad? Hard on bare feet?
I read your blog there and what you have could possibly by a black walnut tree and not sweet gum. Black walnuts are also spiny balls, very similar.
They are very toxic to other plants. They will kill gardens other trees nearby. We spent many years cleaning these up and burning them. My father-in-law died 3 years ago and we finally got to cut them down. Neighbor finally had a nice garden. I like english walnuts which are sweeter, black walnuts are bitter and not my cup of tea. Nobody wanted them, we asked, so we burned them, year after year.
The black walnut was the research paper for my sun. The tincture of the green husk of the nut,kills virus,mold, bacteria,mildew, parasites.
I make a gallon of the tincture for my church every year. I found that the tincture of the dried sweet gum ball will eliminate gas,and sooth the lower intestine. Any one can email me and get the 20 page report ,or the short version of the black walnut and or both trees fruit tincture.
Has anyone ever heard of that? My grandmother would use sweet gum twigs to chew on and brush her teeth. My mother has done that as well. Not tried it myself, as yet.: The Sedum is taller than most Hostas, so plant it next to the tree…then ring it with Hostas.
If you get a few plants, they will multiply quickly. You can break one plant apart and have several the next year. At the edge, I usually put a ring of shade loving annuals, making sure to plant them in a high grade potting soil.
I hope this helps. It is also a valuable lumber. It will burn when it is dry but it does not burn hot like oak or poplar for example. You cannot split sweetgum with the usual maul or wedge and hammer. For that reason, only the limbs small enough to cut to length for use in your fireplace are worthwhile.
Later I read that the sap is a mild narcotic and we teased him about it. Is it true that the sap has a narcotic effect? Is that what makes it medicinally useful? Green or dried brown ones! I saw an ornament that used a sweet gum ball. I would love to buy some if you are serious. The sap flows out then thickens. The sap is too bitter to make wine from it. It is called Sweet Gum not because it is sweet.
My email is at the bottom of my web page: Also my tree has seeds like large grains of sand that blow around the yard but not every year. My herbalis consultants say the American Sweet Gum does have benefits regard the flu. It was all ways sweet to my taste in East Texas. We have many sweet gums around here. I have known them well since I was a kid, because they were the trees we avoided cutting up for firewood.
If you ever tried to split one, you would know why. Two years ago, I cut one out of my wooded lot, to use as a temporary post for my hammock. As it dried, the wood would crack open in a twisting, spiral pattern, just like the grain. Last year, since I have been researching wild edibles, I did learn about the sap once being used for chewing gum, but I have yet to try it.
My latest efforts have been tapping my 5 maples for maple syrup. But I will at some point try it. Otherwise, I may use some of the trees in a hugelkultur project within my larger permaculture project.
Nobody I have read have any suggestion can you tell me what to do with them when they fall from the tree please. One thing for sure I am tried of raking them up my self and thinking about cutting it down, if it is no use for nothing.
We are looking to have it removed but because it is alive I would rather donate it or sell so it can live on… Any recommendations? One catch, you have to take them all……. Their caterpillars eat the leaves. Just saw the first one of the year tonight April 5 , attracted by my patio light. He said that the trees are putting out little low branches and that indicates stress.
I am wondering if he just wanted the job! They look like perfectly healthy mature trees to me.
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