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Article
Description: Understanding
why your pet eats grass.
Title of Article: "Putting Your Pet Out To Pasture" By Gary Kurz Don't
let the title fool you. This
is not an article about your pet getting old.
The title is just a "hook" to encourage you to read on.
Hopefully, when you do, you will find this a very informative
article relating to your pet's health, or at least your understanding of
some aspects of it. I
actually want to talk to you about grass.
That's right…grass. More
specifically, I want to talk to you about why dogs and cats eat grass.
I
think we would be hard-pressed to find anyone who has not witnessed this
peculiarity of domestic animals at one time or another.
When it is our pet, however, it can cause us concern and, if we let
our imaginations go unchecked, it can cause us alarm.
It
has been my experience that on occasion, that alarm can lead to
unnecessary expense as we panic and rush our best friend off to the
nearest veterinarian, only to hear him tell us with a chuckle "he's
okay, it's normal for him to eat grass.
How embarrassing is that! More
unsettling is that invariably shortly after ingesting the grass, perhaps
20 minutes later, they regurgitate it back up in a kind of green gooey
mess (sorry to be so graphic). Why
would they do this? Why would
they do something that appears to be so hard on their system, or maybe
even harmful to them? Should I
be alarmed? The
short answer is "no, don't panic".
As I mentioned earlier, any veterinarian will tell you that this is
normal behavior. The very fact
that all pets do it should suggest to you that it is not a bad thing. The
long or more detailed answer is that the outdoors is an animal's natural
world and grass is part of that world.
You and I can turn on the radio or television and be kept up to
date on what is happening in our world.
For dogs and cats, the ground is their primary source of connection
with their world. The
ground is like a giant newspaper for them.
They interpret the odors and conditions to discover what other dogs
have been visiting their turf and what they did there.
They "read" the yard to know what is happening in the
world outside the house. With
their heightened senses, they perceive when another dog or cat has been on
their turf, whether it rained the night before, that so and so is in heat,
or that the season is changing. Additionally,
the role the ground plays in our pet's lives does not end at bringing them
the news. Through their own
"contributions", they communicate to future visitors of that
site who the yard belongs to, who they are and what they are about.
Sometimes the deposit is meant as a welcome, other times a warning.
It just depends on what the news is for that day. But
in keeping with the primary theme of this article, the ground is also the
local canine and feline drug store. Perhaps
it could more accurately be called the local natural herb store.
I
don't know how many times I have heard someone ignorantly say "look
at that stupid dog eating grass".
The truth is, they are not stupid at all, but are rather quite
savvy natural pharmacists. I
think most people would be surprised to learn that animals know a whole
lot more about herbs than we do. I
concede it may be more of an instinctive knowledge than cognitive
understanding, but it is knowledge nonetheless. In
fact, their understanding of herbal remedies is awesome.
Have you ever noticed that they don't eat just any grass…they
sniff around until they find exactly what they are looking for?
Like the aisles in a drug store, each section of the outdoors holds
different remedies. For
instance, certain grasses and sprouts are sought out and taken as internal
cleansers. They cause
vomiting; something we have all witnessed.
This vomiting is the expected result for your pet.
They know when they eat it that it will cause this reaction, yet
they do it willingly and with purpose. They
instinctively know that it will cleanse their body of bile and other items
that are not digestible. Anyone
who loves and keeps animals knows that there are a lot of items that
qualify in this category, from shoes to yarn to hair to some of the most
extraordinary items. While
it is unsettling to know that they are not smart enough to figure out that
swallowing a sock is not a good thing, it is comforting that they are
usually savvy enough to know how to extricate it from their system before
it becomes a problem or threat. This
only emphasizes the importance of their having access to the outdoors on a
regular basis. Continuing,
there is more to their natural pharmacy than just cleansers.
Other grasses and herbs help evict or terminate worms and other
parasites in their system. Still
others provide needed minerals and nutrients and enhance digestive enzymes
and acids. Uncannily, they all
seem to know what remedy is needed for exactly whatever ails them at the
moment. Then,
perhaps the biggest benefit to them is the presence of chlorophyll in most
grasses. Chlorophyll helps to
fight infection, enrich the coat and even relieves pain such as joint
aches. It can also enhance
cartilage soundness and offers a host of other benefits.
I
know all this sounds a bit simplistic, but it really is not that
complicated. The truth is that
animals appear to know more about these things than you and I do and
certainly more than we would think they should know.
I am not sure "how" they know, but it is enough to accept
that they do know, without having to know the "why". Modern
medicine has actually taken a step backwards to develop more primitive
remedies as a result of a closer study of this savvy in animals.
Science is now recognizing that many of the grass roots (pardon the
pun) remedies nature provides for our pets are as good as, if not better
than synthetic drugs. In
fact, people are learning how to cultivate and produce certain herbs and
grasses to help their pets, even freezing summer crops for winter
dispensing when grasses are not in season.
This can be especially helpful to cats and other mammals who are
not allowed to venture outdoors, but who still need to ingest some of the
natural cleansing agents found there. Next
time you see your pet eating grass, don't worry about it.
They are doing something to help their health.
Just give them time to allow the process to culminate before you
let them back in on your carpet. |
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The author, Gary Kurz, helps
those grieving the loss of a pet to understand the Biblical evidence that
proves they live on. His most
popular book, "Cold Noses at the Pearly Gates" delivers hope and
comfort to the reader in a
very gentle, yet convincing way. Visit
at www.coldnosesbook.com
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