I've also heard just recently from my brothers fiancee, that adding tomato
soup to a dogs food will also eliminate the burn spots, she swears by it, so
the common thing here between the cider vinegar and the tomato soup would be
the acid content I think.
"pat" wrote in message
om...
I have also heard that adding cider vinegar to dogs diet will stop the
burn problem. Think it was in a yard book that talks about wierd ways
to solve problems like beer/slugs. If I remember it was not a lot per
cup of food maybe like a teaspoon
Steveo wrote in message
...
"GamePlayer No. 1058" wrote:
I bought some pills for the dogs, and administered as directed, 4 for
the
large dog 2x a day for the first 2 weeks, then 4 pills a day, and 3
for
the small dog, 2x a day for the first week then 3 pills a day, and I
can
honestly say that I do NOT see any further grass burning than was
there
originally before administering the pills.
Theres a total of about 8 or 10 burn spots, but nothing new anymore.
The stuff is called NatureVet Grass Saver.
Im stoked, though I do hate paying out the additional $15.00 a bottle
whenever I run out.
Now I just need to reseed the dead spots and have a really nice lawn
again.
Don't want to rain on your parade, but did it coincide with the season
change? Also, I hope it's ok for the dog..
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