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I have a very personal and heartwarming story to share with you about a life-threatening crisis that became a natural healing miracle.
One of the things we’re all told by the dishonest western medical system is that natural medicine can’t be used for emergency medicine. It can’t stop bleeding, stop infections or help wounds heal, we’re told.
Nonsense. In fact, natural medicine is the most powerful medicine of all. The photos below tell an amazing story that shows this in graphic detail.
WARNING: Graphic photos to follow. You may be grossed out…
As you know, I raise free-range chickens without using any antibiotics, vaccines or hormones. They’re egg-layers, and they produce the most nutritious eggs imaginable. You can’t buy eggs this good! Our chickens are happy and healthy, and they even sunbathe from time to time by resting in some dirt, laying on their side, and extending a wing to let the sun reach all the feathers and skin underneath.
Because we let the chickens free range, they roam around in a very wide area, eating bugs and weeds, scratching the grass to find food. We also supplement their diet with an organic, soy-free feed, but most of their food comes from scratching the ground, which is what chickens prefer to do.
One day, a chicken somehow flew over a fence and got into a fenced area where we are raising some puppies. All puppies automatically think chickens are toys to play with, and they managed to trap this chicken into a corner and really tear into it.
By the time I arrived on the scene, they had eaten all the feathers off the chicken’s back and had eaten part of the chicken’s hip meat. They chewed through the skin, through the meat and got into the chicken’s bone. The chicken was bleeding badly. See the photos of the damage:
When I rescued the chicken, it was bleeding profusely. I knew I had to stop the bleeding or this chicken would die in minutes.
So I grabbed the Yunnan Baiyao powder that’s part of my own emergency first aid kit. It’s an ancient Chinese Medicine recipe that stops bleeding almost immediately. I opened the powder and immediately began to apply it to the chicken’s open wounds.
Next, I knew I needed to apply a natural antibiotic to the wounds that would seal out bacteria and promote healing. So I grabbed a packet of Manuka Honey — also from my first aid kit — and smeared it all over the chicken’s wounds using a latex glove, to make sure I didn’t infect the chicken with my own hands.
At this point, the chicken looked like this:
From there, I isolated the chicken into a “healing nursery” away from other chickens and animals. For a period of about 3 weeks, I kept it there, feeding it organic chicken feed and fresh herbs that I’m growing in my Food Rising grow systems (www.FoodRising.org) which include oregano, thyme, peppermint and a few others.
Each day, I sprayed the wounds with colloidal silver from Sovereign Silver. This works as a topical protective layer that helps prevent surface infections on the chicken.
The chicken was very traumatized at first and didn’t move much for a couple of days. After about 5 days, it started walking again, and after about 7 days, it began to grow back feathers.
I continued with the daily spraying of colloidal silver. There was no more need for Manuka honey or the Yunnan Baiyao powder. I just kept nourishing the chicken with quality food and clean water, spraying it with the silver each day.
After about another two weeks, the giant scab on its back came off. Most of the feathers had grown back:
A week later, I was able to return the chicken to the open pasture where she could free-range with other chickens!
And here’s a photo I took yesterday, showing her walking and socializing with the other chickens without any problems at all!
You can even see from this angle that she’s got full feather recovery. Yes, there’s a lot of scar tissue under those feathers, but for a chicken that was being eaten alive, this is a remarkable recovery:
As you can see from this story, natural medicine can save lives even in severe trauma situations. This natural medicine stopped the bleeding, prevented infections and supported rapid healing to save this chicken’s life.
Does this mean you should never go to the emergency room if you suffer a severe wound? No, of course not. Go to the emergency room if you need to. Western doctors are really good at saving lives following severe biological trauma. If you lose a hand in a machinery accident, you need a surgeon and immediate urgent care.
But in situations where there is no doctor, no emergency room and no urgent care, you need to know just how powerful natural medicine can be at saving lives.
You may find yourself in a situation in the future where hospitals are overrun following some catastrophe or pandemic outbreak. You might need urgent medical care following some act of war or terrorism. You can’t count on always being able to waltz into an emergency room and get immediate care, especially when hospitals are already turning patients away and running out of critical supplies like antibiotics.
For all sorts of situations, it’s important to know how natural medicine can help stop infections, speed healing and save lives. That’s why I shared this story from my own ranch, to show you how natural medicine can be used very effectively in a life-or-death emergency involving not just animals but also people.
For example, if a neighbor suffered a severe wound on their farm and was bleeding profusely, I would do three things: 1) Immediately apply a tourniquet to their arm to try to stop the bleeding. 2) Immediately apply Yunna Baiyao powder to the wound to further stop the bleeding. 3) Rush the person to the nearest emergency room for urgent medical care. Each of the three steps plays a crucial role in saving their life and preventing a “bleed out.”
If you don’t stop the bleeding, just rushing them to the emergency room may be useless. They might be D.O.A. by the time you get there. So knowing how to stop bleeding is really, really important. That’s why I’m an advocate of emergency first aid training and home first aid kits. I’m also a big supporter of EMT training, paramedics and all front-line urgent care technicians, including battlefield paramedics.
I strongly urge you to acquire some Yunnan Baiyao powder and some Manuka honey for your own emergency first aid kit. We don’t sell those items, but you can find them from many retailers. There’s a lot of counterfeit Yunnan Baiyao on the market, so make sure you buy from a reputable source.
On the colloidal silver side, we’re now offering a valuable kit called the Natural First Aid Kit which includes:
– Sovereign Silver Fine Mist Spray -2 fl oz
– Sovereign Silver, Silver, First Aid Gel, 1 fl oz (29 ml)
– Sovereign Silver, Bio-Active Silver Hydrosol, 10 ppm, 2oz dropper
– O3 First Aid Cream sample size (0.25oz)
This is a great value in acquiring three different forms of colloidal silver, plus you get the O3 First Aid Cream as a bonus.
This is exactly the same colloidal silver I sprayed on the chicken described above. I have no doubt that this colloidal silver played an important role in helping protect that chicken and support its healing.
A good source for Yunnan Baiyao Powder is:
http://www.caicorporation.com/Yunnan-Baiyao-Powder_p_3284.html
For Manuka Honey, there’s a product called “Wound Honey” that you can find on Amazon.com.
But I actually prefer the sachet packets offered by the Wedderspoon company, which makes this Manuka honey product, also available on Amazon.
Click here to visit the Wedderspoon website, where they offer a huge assortment of Manuka honey products.
You’ll notice, by the way, that all these off-site links are not affiliate links. We don’t earn anything on your Amazon purchases from this story, or any other external links. If you want to help support our operation, consider acquiring the Natural First Aid Kit from the Natural News Store. That provides us with a bit of funding to keep pursuing our mission of public education about natural healing, natural medicine and holistic, self-reliant living.
Thank you for your support. And please use this wisdom to help SAVE LIVES!
Realize, too, that if you raise chickens, you are sooner or later going to need to deal with medical emergencies due to predators such as dogs, birds, owls, raccoons and so on. You need to know how to save the lives of animals when you can, or how to put them out of their misery when euthanasia is the only humane option remaining. Either way, you’d be smart to have the skills, the supplies and the courage to do what’s necessary when the time comes.
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