Pets With Microchips May Lose Their Electromagnetic Senses and Get Lost
Coming off the idea that cell phone radiation interferes with the cryptochrome of bees, thus causing them to lose their natural instinct and sense of direction, there may be more for pet owners to be concerned over.
Bees use cryptochrome to sense where the magnetic force of the Earth is.
Areas with high cell phone usage cause bees to get lost once they leave the hive due to cell phone radiation.
Could other electronic devices also interfere with the natural senses of animals? Stories of Lost Pets Returning Reveal They All Had Microchips Inserted Before Over the past few years countless stories of lost pets have been told.
Particularly cats.
There are stories of cats that have gone missing and reappear six years later.
In some cases cats vanish and resurface as many as nine years later.
The forces of nature against this are astounding.
Most never have the "miracle ending".
But all of the stories have a similar theme.
"Oh, Thank goodness we had our pet chipped," the owners exclaim.
Most people in the United States take good care of their pets.
They are part of the family household and treated as such.
Pet owners love their animals so much they save no expense sometimes.
That includes getting chipped.
Just how does this chip work? The Function of the Pet Microchip Ironically, the microchip implant is called a "LifeChip" by one manufacturer.
Hmm.
It is sold in mass quantities to pet owners for fear their pet will get lost or stolen.
The wonder of the microchip is that it allows the pet to be located.
The microchip is a capsule only about the size of a grain of rice and for a meager $25 investment, a pet can have a microchip injected into the skin between the shoulder blades.
Some states require pets that are being adopted to be chipped.
Microchips work by emitting a radio frequency that can be picked up via a scanner.
There are major companies making millions of dinero around the world and an international board that sets operational standards for the microchips.
The chips give off a frequency as much as a 132.
2 kHz.
Could microchip implants possibly be interfering with the direction of pets as they try to sense the Earth's magnetic field as do the bees? There was Already a Controversy Over the Microchips A controversy came out years ago that some manufacturer's microchips weren't actually compatible with the scanners that veterinarians were using.
But the facts may be even worse.
One manufacturer alone boasts on their website they have recovered over 200,000 pets with their microchip.
More than 8,000 pets a week are found and reunited with their owners.
That's a lot.
With around one million pets implanted with these devices, that's like 1 in 5 getting lost.
There is no question that microchips can help find the pet once they are lost.
But can they also help the pet get lost to begin with? To date, there are no tests or studies found to see the impact of the microchip on a pet's senses.
It may be too difficult to verify.
But it would be good for one to generate, if possible.
This is vital for the love of the pet.
And while over the last hundred plus years people have already lost their natural instincts in a major way, people are now being chipped.
Did we not see this coming? By Jori Sams
Bees use cryptochrome to sense where the magnetic force of the Earth is.
Areas with high cell phone usage cause bees to get lost once they leave the hive due to cell phone radiation.
Could other electronic devices also interfere with the natural senses of animals? Stories of Lost Pets Returning Reveal They All Had Microchips Inserted Before Over the past few years countless stories of lost pets have been told.
Particularly cats.
There are stories of cats that have gone missing and reappear six years later.
In some cases cats vanish and resurface as many as nine years later.
The forces of nature against this are astounding.
Most never have the "miracle ending".
But all of the stories have a similar theme.
"Oh, Thank goodness we had our pet chipped," the owners exclaim.
Most people in the United States take good care of their pets.
They are part of the family household and treated as such.
Pet owners love their animals so much they save no expense sometimes.
That includes getting chipped.
Just how does this chip work? The Function of the Pet Microchip Ironically, the microchip implant is called a "LifeChip" by one manufacturer.
Hmm.
It is sold in mass quantities to pet owners for fear their pet will get lost or stolen.
The wonder of the microchip is that it allows the pet to be located.
The microchip is a capsule only about the size of a grain of rice and for a meager $25 investment, a pet can have a microchip injected into the skin between the shoulder blades.
Some states require pets that are being adopted to be chipped.
Microchips work by emitting a radio frequency that can be picked up via a scanner.
There are major companies making millions of dinero around the world and an international board that sets operational standards for the microchips.
The chips give off a frequency as much as a 132.
2 kHz.
Could microchip implants possibly be interfering with the direction of pets as they try to sense the Earth's magnetic field as do the bees? There was Already a Controversy Over the Microchips A controversy came out years ago that some manufacturer's microchips weren't actually compatible with the scanners that veterinarians were using.
But the facts may be even worse.
One manufacturer alone boasts on their website they have recovered over 200,000 pets with their microchip.
More than 8,000 pets a week are found and reunited with their owners.
That's a lot.
With around one million pets implanted with these devices, that's like 1 in 5 getting lost.
There is no question that microchips can help find the pet once they are lost.
But can they also help the pet get lost to begin with? To date, there are no tests or studies found to see the impact of the microchip on a pet's senses.
It may be too difficult to verify.
But it would be good for one to generate, if possible.
This is vital for the love of the pet.
And while over the last hundred plus years people have already lost their natural instincts in a major way, people are now being chipped.
Did we not see this coming? By Jori Sams