Rescue Remedy For Cats and Dogs

Published: 27th November 2009
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Hissing, snarling, lashing out with claws barbed and sharp as razor wire, the orange-striped feral cat lets Amanda know clearly just how much she cannot stand confinement in a cage. Calmly, showing no fear, Amanda slips the miniature tiger a piece of fish well marinated in Rescue Remedy for dogs and cats. Sniffing it suspiciously and eyeing Amanda as she decides, the cat finally lunges at and devours the tuna.

Patiently waiting, assessing Rescue Remedy's effects, Amanda watches the cat relax...but not enough. Our veteran animal-rescue worker wisely offers a second well-marinated too-tempting tuna treat. A few minutes after attacking the second piece of fish, the wild beast visibly relaxes. Amanda thinks she even detects a faint purr. Wearing heavy gloves and protective clothing, Amanda deftly reaches into the cat-trap, her own unique design, firmly but gently grabs her new animal friend, and moves her now officially rescued cat to a comfortable carrier for transport to shelter.

"I'm sure there's some way to do all this without the Rescue Remedy," Amanda looks uncertain, "But I really cannot imagine what it would be. And I know I would not attempt it."

Although Welsh farmers experimented with and embraced Dr. Bach's Rescue Remedy before the second World War, the five-flower mix did not really catch-on until the late sixties and early seventies. Bach and his early followers are widely quoted insisting, "The Remedies work for man and beast alike." Despite pioneering Bach Practitioners' advocacy, however, Rescue Remedy for pets did not gain widespread acceptance among veterinary health professionals until eco-awareness and back-to-Nature initiatives drove them to it. Now, most vets and animal rescue workers cannot imagine working without it.

In animal shelters, Rescue Remedy for dogs and cats aids their rehabilitation. Left alone either in the wild or roaming the city, both cats and dogs will revert to their feral states. Dogs, hunting and surviving according to their instincts, typically respond quickly and well to rehabilitation-especially with the help of daily Rescue Remedy, which helps them trust their human therapists. According to animal experts, cats are not so thoroughly domesticated as dogs, so that their trust of humans grows at about a glacier's pace, and their feral behaviors wane slowly. Still, with patient, loving care and steady administration of it, even the most reluctant wild cats eventually will respond to therapy.

Amanda, a devoted volunteer at the local animal shelter, ardently advocates this for dogs and cats. She uses the five-flower miracle mix with her own dogs and cats, raving about how well it relaxes them for car trips and visits to the vet. In everyday use, regular doses of Rescue Remedy in the cats' and dogs' drinking water keep all the canines playing nicely with one another, loyally following their alpha-dog's example. "It especially helps control the epic struggle between the cats and dogs," Amanda smiles. "Yes, they still tease and torment one another, but they do not take it so seriously. In fact," Amanda laughs and shakes her head, "I think Rescue Remedy helps dogs acquiesce in the inescapable fact cats rule. The cats will not have it any other way."

For more great tips on rescue remedy for cats please visit http://bachrescueremedy.net/

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Source: http://cthomas.articlealley.com/rescue-remedy-for-cats-and-dogs-1260760.html


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