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Post by toni on Jun 18, 2013 13:43:36 GMT -5
http:// Major ROUGH drawing of exactly what I'm seeing since my scope is just being un-cooperative for taking pictures. oi40.tinypic.com/33usklu.jpg Here's a picture I was able to take, (it's not very good) because I had to use my (CAMCORDER) with 70X zoom of all things through the lense of the scope. And here's a shakey video of it "using the camcorder zoom with the scope". Believe me, it's hard to "video" through a microscope, but...here HE IS!!!! I just now took this picture of it's tail end (right below). Notice how it's banded, and the very end looks like a crown or "fringed". This picture is from *off the internet* of the Female: Source: www.morgellons-uk.net/?p=322(((((( SEE THIS VIDEO, the RED Male )))))) tinypic.com/player.php?v=2a6shti&s=5 You can stop the video at any time to see it's : Segments and the FRINGE (looks like a kings crown) at it's bottom end. I'll contact Klapow too, I think he needs to see this. Dr. Harvey also spoke of these "C. Pulmoni's". The female is longer and more slender, with the same "fringe at it's tail end". But, the RUBY red male, (from the only literature out there) this sure seems like "it'. Well, Today, I found this, and it looks like a REAL GOOD possibility also. entnemdept.ufl.edu/creatures/nematode/r_reniformis.htm
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Post by toni on Jun 18, 2013 14:42:50 GMT -5
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Post by toni on Jun 18, 2013 15:06:40 GMT -5
Reniform nematodes in the genus Rotylenchulus are semiendoparasitic (partially inside roots) species in which the females penetrate the root cortex, establish a permanent-feeding site in the stele region of the root and become sedentary or immobile. The anterior portion (head region) of the body remains embedded in the root whereas the posterior portion (tail region) protrudes from the root surface and swells during maturation. The term 'reniform' refers to the kidney-shaped body of the mature female.
Interesting about the "kidney like shape too".
The average body length is about 0.34 to 0.42mm for juveniles and males, and 0.38 to 0.52 for mature female nematodes. Rest in a C shape when killed by heat.
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Post by toni on Jun 18, 2013 15:13:34 GMT -5
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Post by Lynn on Jun 18, 2013 16:04:57 GMT -5
Hi Toni
Please help me out here. I am no good with mm. Is the worm about the size of this c on the page? Or slightly smaller? The articles were very interesting, but mostly Greek to me. Tell me what you think it is saying and how it would translate to us. Sorry, but only way I can learn.
I use to cough out those tiny tiny white Nats and they would fly away and during those times I would cough up tiny worms pinkish red in color and in the shape of a C, but a little smaller. I added the D.E. to my diet and cut back on my weak coffees and stopped coughing up and out both bugs. If I ever go through that again I will try harder to catch the Nat as it fly up and away from me and the worms I will collect and send to via the fashion you said works best.
In Light Lynn/TorpedoLynn
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Post by toni on Jun 18, 2013 16:55:51 GMT -5
Hi Lynn,
Well, to try and imagine how tiny .4mm is, (it's the actual size that Demodex mites) are too.
You'd asked if they were the size of a "c" or slightly smaller.
Actually, they're so tiny (microscopic) that we'd need not 20/20 vision, but for our eyes to be at least 400X greater than they are now. (that's how tiny) hehehe they really are so tiny, that the "c" would be like an gnat compared to a house, (that's how small) they are.
And it's okay, ask away.
To put it "in a nutshell".....genetic markers (pigments) are used at the cellular level for various reasons. IF, we have (root/cotton/vegetable) nematodes...."they live in plant roots", as they couldn't sustain without it. One must (provide plant growth) to maintain such a nematode. AND a GMO plant at that - it would be, because "God made plants" don't express "markers" as such (the red pigment) or....maybe even (the blue we've seen time and time again.) GUS proteins "are also Blue markers".
Genetic modification markers (are eaten by the nematodes) thus...the red pigment in the body. Wonder if that's why the red pigment (proteins) are difficult as Monsanto may be the only one privy to that (chemistry makeup).
We shouldn't have any "gmo" anything expressing in our body, but....it's looking like a big Hummmmm oh yeah... imho by (such a specific nematode).
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Post by Lynn on Jun 19, 2013 11:32:32 GMT -5
Hi Toni
I wonder then if the worm I was coughing up was the baby state of the white Nat I was coughing out. Gosh that was just last year all year.
In Light Lynn/TorpedoLynn
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Post by toni on Jun 19, 2013 16:56:34 GMT -5
Hi Lynn,
Gosh, it's hard to know what was happening for sure. Here's something on human myiasis :http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myiasis
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Post by Lynn on Jun 19, 2013 19:09:49 GMT -5
Hi Toni
Not the right critter. Mine only came out of my throat only and were very tiny and pinkish red.
In Light Lynn
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Post by absurdlyhaywired on Jun 19, 2013 20:44:56 GMT -5
Hi torpedo-this is a dictyostelium slug. I think plenty of these have been in my throat and everywhere else.
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Post by Lynn on Jun 20, 2013 0:12:04 GMT -5
Hi Absud
Much closer. How big do the get when coming out of your throat. Mine are always curled into a perfect c but small then the c you see on the page. Did you get yours to stop. If I remember right after several months on the D.E. it went away. I am fairly sure if I quit taking it long enough I will start up again.
In Light Lynn/TorpedoLynn
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Post by absurdlyhaywired on Jun 20, 2013 0:59:17 GMT -5
Hi torpedo-I don't know how big they get-I've seen lots of tiny c's and larger from throat. None from throat for awhile though. I had plenty garden sized slug things come from arms and face. Sometimes I think they look like what toni is seeing. Look at this picture of the dictyostelium life cycle. I'm "certain" I'm seeing all of these forms. And this could explain many of my symptoms but I surely don't know. I can find no rhyme or reason for what happens with me as far as trying to treat this. I have no energy or motivation lately but lots of pain.
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Post by Baraka Obam on Jun 20, 2013 12:17:10 GMT -5
I bet ya'll been wondering what I have been doing, LOL, important stuff but I got a moment, to say hello, HELLO Absurdlyhaywired, hope you get some relief soon. Here is a site may tickle your fancy, these things do have the nice color of our fibers, looked at many pictures of the cryptostronglus pulmoni, do not see any of our flat twisted fibers, then maybe sombody missed something, that I can not imagine as easy as it is to see our fibers we need NOTHING to produce them. A rainy, sunny, cold, hot, normal, nice day will do and we can harvest a huge pile of these fibers from blood, urine, skin, saliva, poopee and even our underware. Anyway here is a little way to harvest your cryptostronglus specimins, possibly if you have such a thing, who knows maybe the fibers are just dried up dead ones. There is one thing you want to look at here in the pictures, the crypostronglus has a root looking system, our fibers do not, BUT the item I saw the parasite in that came from my urine did have like a root system and there were a good amount of these rooted things in my urine. I only saw one with the parasite inside it. The parasite could be seen much easier without the camera but if you pay attention you can see it moving 2/3 of the way up the fiber, INSIDE, this thing is tiny. I have not seen these things anymore since taking ONE dose of ivermectin. www.youtube.com/watch?v=2wbN3DMpl8w members3.jcom.home.ne.jp/bignifty/
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Post by absurdlyhaywired on Jun 20, 2013 13:09:36 GMT -5
Very interesting this is. Thanks Baraka. members3.jcom.home.ne.jp/bignifty/ This flakey thing is absent in the dicty cycle, complicating that diagnosis for me. Could it be that I have dicty AND C. pulmoni AND CFS AND fibromyalgia AND botfly myiasis AND so on................Wow
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Post by toni on Jun 20, 2013 14:53:14 GMT -5
Hi Absurdly,
Can I ask what kind of a scope you're using? I'm still looking at scopes and need to get one. Just haven't been on it like I should. Thank you.
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Post by absurdlyhaywired on Jun 20, 2013 15:05:00 GMT -5
hi toni-I'm here looking at nematodes today. Here's my scope set-up. ha- - - NOT! I'm using this scope- store.amscope.com/m150c-e.html But I don't know what I'm looking at......lol
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Post by absurdlyhaywired on Jun 20, 2013 17:05:06 GMT -5
definitely blue- - - true color- - - no stain
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Post by absurdlyhaywired on Jun 20, 2013 17:06:16 GMT -5
another girl?
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Post by absurdlyhaywired on Jun 20, 2013 17:08:17 GMT -5
a guy? Could these photos portray them in the process of "shedding"? In most of my photos the flaky things are grey. Empties?
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Post by toni on Jun 21, 2013 8:01:43 GMT -5
Thank you Absurdly. Question : The scope there, the Zeiss Axiovert, I'm assuming you go somewhere and rent that one? Is that where the new fiber pictures are from? I'm wondering "which pictures" are from ( your actual scope) so I can see "the pictures it takes", hehehe since I'm not getting a Zeiss. I sure appreciate (that help). I'm just trying to decide on a scope is all, and wanting to see the quality of pics.
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