As another poster pointed out, they are vaxxing zoo animals.
It would be interesting to know if the horse was vaxxed and his Ivermectin dosing schedule.
Some people think Ivermectin can counteract the spike proteins in the Notavaxxes.
I understand animals are not always given Ivermectin so they do not develop a tolerance. It is rotated along with other dewormers.
It's so the parasites don't gain resistance to any one given dewormer. They also used to tell you to deworm on a regular basis but now they say to do a fecal eggs count to decide if you need to deworm. There are at least a half a dozen different dewormers. I've got one here with the active ingredient fenbendazole. Cures cancer according to some. Have no idea if it cures covid; https://duckduckgo.com/?t=ffcm&q=fenbendazole
I've got meat goats so I researched the parasite subject. Also bought a microscope to do the fecal egg counts but haven't used it yet. My goats are fat and healthy. Helps that I chose a breed that has naturally high parasite resistance. The breed was developed partly using feral goats from New Zealand.
I understand animals are not always given Ivermectin so they do not develop a tolerance. It is rotated along with other dewormers.
= = =
So, I, as a declared oat eater, should rotate also?
They vaccinated a bunch of gorillas and then guess what.. they got covid.