I was able to save my little hen that an owl attacked. The owl ripped the skin off her back. I didn’t listen to the advice to cull her. I first sprayed colloidal silver on her skinless back, then sprayed her back 3 times every day with Willard Water. There was a new layer of skin formed within 24 hours and within a month her feathers were growing back. She was away from her flock in my living room that whole healing time so there was a problem when I introduced her back to the flock. The top hen began pecking her back. I had a chicken saddle covering it but I was concerned that top hen would damage what we’d worked so lovingly to heal. So being the chicken lover I am, I got a whole new batch of chicks and put my hen in with them until they were all a defendable size. Then I introduced them all together back into the coop and voila. My little hen slid right in under the top hens nose. And it all worked out perfectly. All the best to dear Henry. He’s going to survive with your love and care. 🙏🏻♥️
That's so wonderful. Thank you for sharing. Yes, I worry about the introduction back with his brothers, will do the coop in a coop for a while when that time comes so they can re-familiarize themselves. Colloidal silver is truly amazing, I've used it to aid in healing a hen, rooster, duck and cat. I'm not familiar with Willard Water, I will look that up. I used Kangen 2.5 acidic water to cleanse the wound and peroxide, initially...then switched to colloidal silver and honey. I love hearing your story about helping your little hen, that's what it's all about....not giving up, trusting the body to heal and being a helper. Blessings!
Angela, I saw this 60 Minutes years n years ago. It’s amazing. From 1983 I think. This will blow your mind about Willard Water. Let me know what you think!
I use it in my dog’s drinking water and if I had chickens today, I’d put it in their water too just to assure good health. I think there’s a good reason, which will be obvious to you, why Willard Water has become obscure over the decades. Big Pharm abhors competition.
Thank you. It's a miracle he's still here 3 nights later. We aren't out of the woods yet, I'm giving him lots of love hoping to see improvements on the wound.
I do not know about the validity of avian flu; I do find the fear-mongering getting out of hand. I do know that I have yet to see any dead birds here in Toronto. I feed all kinds of birds--cardinals, crows, blue jays, sparrows, mourning doves and, yes, starlings. It gives me joy.
I am glad Henry is recovering. You are so right about our need to view our fellow animals and companions in a far different way than is now typical. We share the Earth with these beautiful and joyful animals.
More cooperation and compassion needs to come from us humans. This will make the world a much better place in which to live. Love the photos, Angela.
Thanx, Angela, for this, um, shot of sanity!
Thanks Sol!
Don' menshun it.
You are awesome
Thank you
I was able to save my little hen that an owl attacked. The owl ripped the skin off her back. I didn’t listen to the advice to cull her. I first sprayed colloidal silver on her skinless back, then sprayed her back 3 times every day with Willard Water. There was a new layer of skin formed within 24 hours and within a month her feathers were growing back. She was away from her flock in my living room that whole healing time so there was a problem when I introduced her back to the flock. The top hen began pecking her back. I had a chicken saddle covering it but I was concerned that top hen would damage what we’d worked so lovingly to heal. So being the chicken lover I am, I got a whole new batch of chicks and put my hen in with them until they were all a defendable size. Then I introduced them all together back into the coop and voila. My little hen slid right in under the top hens nose. And it all worked out perfectly. All the best to dear Henry. He’s going to survive with your love and care. 🙏🏻♥️
That's so wonderful. Thank you for sharing. Yes, I worry about the introduction back with his brothers, will do the coop in a coop for a while when that time comes so they can re-familiarize themselves. Colloidal silver is truly amazing, I've used it to aid in healing a hen, rooster, duck and cat. I'm not familiar with Willard Water, I will look that up. I used Kangen 2.5 acidic water to cleanse the wound and peroxide, initially...then switched to colloidal silver and honey. I love hearing your story about helping your little hen, that's what it's all about....not giving up, trusting the body to heal and being a helper. Blessings!
Angela, I saw this 60 Minutes years n years ago. It’s amazing. From 1983 I think. This will blow your mind about Willard Water. Let me know what you think!
https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=ojW802yW2RY
Fantastic, thank you, I will watch today. I'm familiar with structuring water but had not heard of this.
Hi Angela, if you want to research it further after watching the 20 minute video, here’s their site:
https://drwillard.com/
I use it in my dog’s drinking water and if I had chickens today, I’d put it in their water too just to assure good health. I think there’s a good reason, which will be obvious to you, why Willard Water has become obscure over the decades. Big Pharm abhors competition.
Your compassion and love for Henry & friends is so touching! Go Henry! XO
Thank you. It's a miracle he's still here 3 nights later. We aren't out of the woods yet, I'm giving him lots of love hoping to see improvements on the wound.
Prayers for Henry 🙏
Thanks Simone
Thank you, so true!
Go Henry go! Thank you for the heartfelt understanding
thanks for reading
Thank you for increasing sanity in the world
What a nice story
Thank you
Beautiful
Thank you Paolo
I do not know about the validity of avian flu; I do find the fear-mongering getting out of hand. I do know that I have yet to see any dead birds here in Toronto. I feed all kinds of birds--cardinals, crows, blue jays, sparrows, mourning doves and, yes, starlings. It gives me joy.
I am glad Henry is recovering. You are so right about our need to view our fellow animals and companions in a far different way than is now typical. We share the Earth with these beautiful and joyful animals.
More cooperation and compassion needs to come from us humans. This will make the world a much better place in which to live. Love the photos, Angela.