Whilst I don't adhere to the idea of fox hunting, here in the country they are not well loved for good reason.
I wouldn't shoot a vixen with cubs, but outta season, well... they are a menace.
they only a menace to famers, who keep poultry
that is a link to a totally useless Homeopathic remedy.
I can send you a bottle of water if you honestly imagine it will do any good.
I'll provide it for only £9 a bottle.
Whilst I don't adhere to the idea of fox hunting, here in the country they are not well loved for good reason.
I wouldn't shoot a vixen with cubs, but outta season, well... they are a menace.
they only a menace to famers, who keep poultry
No they take new born lambs as well, they eat almost anything.. I don't hate them, but they are a pest, alongside rats and squirrels.
Talking of infections, a very interesting documentary last night described a very simple answer to the problem of MRSA and similar troublesome bugs that are increasingly causing problems in our hospitals - copper.
Apparently, copper has the property of killing germs deposited on it by human hands and has been shown to be much more effective than bacteriocidal chemicals to which many germs are becoming resistant. They showed pictures of hospitals in America where such things as bed rails, drip stands and tables are either made of, or covered in copper.
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that is a link to a totally useless Homeopathic remedy.
I can send you a bottle of water if you honestly imagine it will do any good.
I'll provide it for only £9 a bottle.
I had better tell the fox that it doesn't work then, his new bushy tail must be a figment of our imagination!
Talking of infections, a very interesting documentary last night described a very simple answer to the problem of MRSA and similar troublesome bugs that are increasingly causing problems in our hospitals - copper.
Apparently, copper has the property of killing germs deposited on it by human hands and has been shown to be much more effective than bacteriocidal chemicals to which many germs are becoming resistant. They showed pictures of hospitals in America where such things as bed rails, drip stands and tables are either made of, or covered in copper.
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A fact that has been known for some time, I have a feeling that the likes of P&G may not like the idea though.
Shiny copper is pretty safe, however when it tarnishes it is poisonous should you have an open wound...
droplets of purified water don't cure disease. There is a very faint chance that one of your neighbours put out some dog scabicide.I had better tell the fox that it doesn't work then, his new bushy tail must be a figment of our imagination!
droplets of purified water don't cure disease. There is a very faint chance that one of your neighbours put out some dog scabicide.I had better tell the fox that it doesn't work then, his new bushy tail must be a figment of our imagination!
I hope your new fox doesn't get infested soon.
There's more;
Properties: Copper tarnishes easily and needs frequent polishing. So, people who work with copper need to wash hands often, so as not to ingest these substances.
when I was at school, I got a wart on my knee.
I have toast and marmalade for breakfast most days, now the wart is gone.
Therefore toast and marmalade cures warts, right?
No, homeopathy does not work (1) at all (2) in the same way that immunisation works, although some people who do not understand immunisation might think it did.
If you take a homeopathic remedy, it is likely that there will not be a single molecule of the "active ingredient" in the purified water you have paid for.
some homeopathists have invented the lunatic idea of "memory of water" where purified water "knows" that is was once in contact with an active ingredient and can magically carry this power into the body to cure you. The question of how water might remember one ingredient, but forget that it was formerly in contact with a glass boittle, a teaspoon, a water pipe, a sewer, a river, the sea, and a puddle is not resolved.
Homeopathy does work.