sg
Pioneers treated their dogs for rabies primarily through prevention, as the disease was well understood to be fatal once symptoms appeared. They often vaccinated their dogs when possible, and if a dog was suspected to have been exposed to rabies, they might confine or isolate it to prevent potential transmission. In cases where symptoms developed, there were few effective treatments, leading many to euthanize affected animals to protect both the dog and the community. Overall, the focus was on prevention and containment rather than treatment once the disease was established.
well they would cut the part that was bitten off and wrap it tightly in cloth
how did pioneers treat rabies in the 1800 hundreds they didn't, they were either shot or left to die.
Pretty much anything can get rabies, including dogs. If something has rabies and bites another thing, it can easily get rabies.
Rabies can infect any mammal. However, most mammals, and most bush dogs, do not have rabies.
Dogs get rabies from being bitten by another animal that is already infected.
If you mean animals with rabies they would be shot. I doubt they ran into many animals with rabies. I have read numerous diary entries written by people who were pioneers and not one mentioned animals with rabies. They wrote about dust, disease, death, birth, flooded wagons, the mountains and snow.
a dog can get rabies by another animal that has rabies biting him.
All mammals can get rabies, and a dog is a mammal.
like all animals dogs have to be bitten by another animal that already has rabies
Nothing, rabies is rabies regardless of the species of mammal it infects.
Mice don't transmit rabies.