Why O why do ulcer prevention products exist?
And did you know that “ulcer prevention” products are simply regular ulcer treatment products, but at a lower dose?
What’s up with that?
Basically, they know their “treatments” don’t actual fix the cause of the ulcers, but are simply a temporary bandaid.
In my new video, find out:
-What 3 tips owners can try before calling the vet for ulcers
-Little known signs of ulcers in horses
-Why 60-90% of all horses have ulcers
-What the real cause of ulcers is (and it’s not stress)
Summary:
Summary by AI:
Dr. Renee Tucker, a 30-year equine veterinarian, explains that while medications are commonly prescribed for horse ulcers, they only treat symptoms and not the root cause. Ulcers, likened to sunburns or potholes in the stomach lining, are worsened by stomach acid. Severe symptoms (e.g., colic, black feces) mean ulcers have likely been present for a long time, but many earlier, subtle signs exist.
She offers three natural tips that can relieve symptoms and help diagnose ulcers:
Free-choice grass hay (no rye or alfalfa) to absorb acid.
Peppermint tea (contents of herbal tea bags) to coat and soothe the gut.
Mineral clay (e.g., Dynamite Mineral Clay) to protect and heal lesions, but it must contain minerals to prevent depletion.
Traditional medications (like GastroGard) reduce acid to ease pain and allow healing but can cause a rebound effect when stopped, leading to excess acid production and recurring symptoms.
Tucker claims the true root cause of ulcers is adjuvants in vaccines—heavy metals and chemicals with an electromagnetic affinity for the gut lining, causing ongoing microscopic damage. Her solution is the Tucker Biokinetic Technique (TBT), an energy healing method designed to break the bond between adjuvants and the gut lining so the body can heal.
She promotes learning TBT at home or working with a practitioner, sharing testimonials of significant horse improvement using her method. She concludes by inviting viewers to join her community, get her ulcer protocol PDF, and explore learning or offering TBT as a service.
Transcript:
Renee (00:00:00.07)
Vets usually prescribe medications for horse ulcers, but here’s the truth. Meds alone won’t fix the root cause of the issue. Today, I’ll show you how to stop horse ulcers at the source. I’m Renee Tucker, 30-year equine veterinarian, and I created the Tucker Biokinetic Technique back in 2000, to help people solve problems like these at the root because ulcers, they keep coming back. To learn how to treat horse ulcers, first we must understand what causes them. Ulcers are an erosion of the lining of the stomach and the intestine of the horse. You can think of it as a sunburn on the inside. The problem with ulcers is twofold. On the one hand, we have the erosion of the lining, which I call the sunburn. Sometimes that sunburn can continue to get worse and erode a bit more, and you have deeper holes. I call these potholes, just for simplicity’s sake. Those hurt even more. But then part two is that the stomach acid comes on top that. So acid on top of a sunburn, it hurts 10 times as much. So how can you tell if your horse is suffering from ulcers? Well, let me tell you.
Renee (00:01:10.11)
If you Google it, you’ll get the severe symptoms, symptoms you should call your vet about. These are not eating well or colicking or having black, dark feces. These are the severe signs that your horse has had ulcers, probably for quite a while. Call your vet if you’ve got a colicky horse, okay? Now, there are lots of subtle signs that happen before things get really bad. I have a list of over 50 things on my PDF report, Fix Horse Ulcers Forever. There’s a long list of symptoms, and I’ll list some of them now. Poor athletic performance, unwilling to go forward, unwilling to do athletic moves that used to be easy. Also, resisting bit contact, hunchy back, unable to relax while being ridden, kicking out while being ridden, switching the tail while being ridden, attitude changes, body soreness, anxiousness, sluggishness in the muscles. The list goes on. If you’re concerned about what are the possible changes, please get my report as a long checklist for you to go through. If you’re concerned that your horse might have ulcers, let me give you three tips that you can do. If your horse improves on these three things, that can be even diagnostic to know if they have ulcers.
Renee (00:02:28.28)
It can definitely help start your horse towards healing them. These three things are hay, peppermint tea, and mineral clay. Let me tell you more about those three. First, the hay. Horses always need hay in front of them, particularly horses with ulcers. The hay will help absorb some of the acid. So free choice hay, add lib, so they can have access to it 24/7. Any type of grass hay, no rye, no alfalfa. Tip number two, pepper mint tea. Yes, the tea. Just go to the grocery store and get any herbal pepper mint tea. You don’t have to brew it, okay? But if you just cut open that tea bag and give the tea that’s in there to your horse twice a day, it’s odd, but that little amount of peppermint can coat the intestine and calm down the ulcers. I’ve had some people try this peppermint tea trial for three days, and they’re like, Wow, I have a new horse. If you have an obvious change like that, that’s a sign that horse is definitely fighting ulcers, and you’ll need to address the root cause. Tip number three, mineral clay. Clay has been found to stick to wounds.
Renee (00:03:39.19)
In fact, they used it back in World War II. So the clay that you give your horse will stick to those open wounds, those erosions, the sunburn or the potholes. It will stick there. This will give the body time to heal it up. It will calm it down and your horse’s symptoms will decrease. The thing about clay is that when When you use it long term, it will absorb minerals from your horse. Therefore, you need to use a mineral clay. Now, the product I recommend is Dynamite Mineral Clay. That’s linked in the description. It is available only in the US. You can safely give mineral clay for 2-3 months, and then you need to address the root cause. I will share very soon a video like this about how to treat horse skin issues, so please subscribe so you don’t miss it. Now, let’s see what a veterinary will use as a treatment for horse ulcers. Please remember that these treatments are treating the symptoms of horse ulcers, not the underlying root cause. Don’t worry, I’ll share that cause with you in just a moment here. Okay, as you recall, the problem with horse ulcers is twofold.
Renee (00:04:41.26)
We have the erosions, which is like sunburn or potholes, and we have the stomach acid, which goes on to the erosions, making it 10 times more painful. Traditional medications such as gastrogarm, ritnitidine, sucralfroid, all these type of things, are focused on decreasing the gastric acid. That’s what they do. They decrease the stomach acid or even stop it in some cases. The idea of that is not only to decrease the pain, but to allow your horse time to heal up the erosions. There are also what they call preventative ulcer medications, which are simply these exact same medications, but at a lower dose. These are also designed to decrease the stomach acid. Using any of these medications is perfectly fine. This decreases horse’s pain, lowers the acid, and the idea is your horse can heal up the erosions and the potholes while the acid is low. So there’s no problem with using these medications temporarily. Most horses should use these medications for 30 days, no longer than 60 days. Why is that? Well, here’s something they don’t tell you. There’s a rebound effect. When the horse’s acid production is decreased or stopped with the medications, the horse cannot digest digest properly.
Renee (00:06:01.19)
The horse’s intestine is saying, Hey, I need some more acid to digest this food. So what happens? The stomach actually increases production of the stomach acid to try to digest the food, but the medication is telling it to stop production. It gets to be a big mess in there. So this is why a lot of people tell me, I can’t take my horse off the medication because the symptoms come back. He must need it. Actually, he may not need it, but you have this rebound effect happening, so you’re making way too much acid. Now, you can help your horse avoid the rebound effect by doing the three tips that I mentioned earlier. Using those three items will help your horse transition back to normal acid production. Okay, let’s talk about that root cause, what’s really causing these ulcers. Well, what starts the erosion of the lining in the first place is the adjuvants that are in vaccines. Adjuvants are heavy metals and chemicals and sometimes combinations of those that have an affinity for the lining of the stomach and small intestine. Affinity means they like to be there and they are stuck there. It’s an electromagnetic attraction.
Renee (00:07:14.06)
This means that they’re not washed off with the food, the immune system can’t get rid of them. So these adjuvents just sit in the lining and they cause microscopic erosions. Sometimes I call them hidden holes because you can’t see them with a naked eye You have to see them with the microscope. So these adjuvants are constantly in there causing erosion. The body is trying to healing, but it just cannot keep up. And then you end up with erosions throughout the intestinal tract. Over time, they can turn into deeper erosions, which I call potholes, which are very painful. So we need to get rid of the cause of these erosions, which are the adjuvants. Now, as I said, the adjuvants have an electromagnetic affinity. They’re stuck there. But luckily, you We can get rid of them using TBT. Tbt, or Tucker Biokinetic Technique, is an energy technique that anyone can learn at home. But if you use TBT, we can break that electromagnetic bond. Then that releases the adjuvants. Then they flush out and then the body can heal the entire lining of the intestine and stomach. If you want to heal your horse’s ulcers forever and have him or her be happy and healthy without constant medication, you should try TBT.
Renee (00:08:27.24)
Tbt is a type of energy work. It’s easy to learn. Anyone can learn it at home. It’s energy work where we work with the body’s innate healing mechanisms. We work with energy fields. We are very specific and focused in what we are working on at the time. In that way, we can focus directly on the bonds between the adjuvants and the lining. It’s super cool. You can check the links below to either find a practitioner or join our courses or find our products. Here’s a testimonial from Jeannie, who followed my protocol. I could not ride my horse Apache even a mile without triggering a painful, colic-like episode. In fact, could not even get him to let me hand walk him half a mile. He would just stop. Now, about four weeks into your program, I can pony him for two hours with a good gallop in there. He was competing with my saddle horse for first place, and I can ride him bareback, and he feels energetic, forward, and enthusiastic under me. I think I got my horse back. Thanks you may have saved his life. I was so close to giving up. Here’s another short testimonial from my friend Tracy Cole about the ulcer protocol.
Tracy (00:09:37.04)
I followed your ulcer protocol, which people can buy as a PDF, and it’s brilliant, and it’s simple. It’s for horse owners. It’s not meant to be for somebody who’s trained in science or chiropractor or whatever. This has been a revelation for me because I thought if a horse has ulcers or suspected ulcers, you get the scope, you get the gastro guard, and you go down that route. And if it doesn’t work, then you get some other medication and it goes on and on, and it may not work or it may work, you may look out. And you’re not saying, are you? Okay, no more gastrocard, no more traditional medications. But you’re saying those are for specific circumstances, and we can use other means as well.
Renee (00:10:25.04)
Here’s the best part. You can learn TBT yourself, fix your own horses, or you could even make a business out of it and use TBT to help horses live a healthy and happy life. To learn TBT, go to the link in the description and find a course. We have a private community where we share tips and tricks and connect. I also send helpful tips twice a week in my email newsletter. That link is also below. Thanks and see you next time.
We are looking for submissions for Dr. Tucker's "Featured Cases." If you have a puzzling case you want solved, we would love to post it to help others. Pictures needed, videos welcome. Email to support@wheredoesmyhorsehurt.com. Thank you.
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