Racing Camel Respiratory Hydration – AHA! Pet Discoveries for September 2025

August 6, 2025 – Racing is in my husband’s blood, both speed boats and fast cars. Rob has said for years that we should sponsor a racing camel in the Middle East. Although wagering is not allowed, the prize monies are equivalent to millions of dollars. Our crazy scheme is the prize money, should the sponsored camel win a race, would greatly exceed the cost of 20 gallons of Watt-Ahh for each time the camel drinks. It is an urban myth that camel humps store water but instead it is fat. We can take a WIT Machine over to Dubai to bubble the DiTetra Gas into the camel’s water trough. We also will need a good driver to follow our racing camel along with avoiding the many SUV’s carrying the other camel owners with microphones shouting encouragements to their respective camels and remotely operating robotic whips to get them to run up to 40 kilometers an hour. This chaotic scene is captured on this video.

The camel racing events are a traditional sport in both Dubai and Qatar that involve great care and training of the camel athletes. Only the best Water of the World will be given to our camel if our musings ever come true.

Other High Power Racing – Horses

Closer to our USA home are stunning race horses. Horse racing was one of my parents’ passion (we were spectators at various race tracks) while Rob’s family owned horses for fox hunting, field jumping and dressage performances. Rob’s preference, however, are high-performance racing engines even though we live in horse country.

When thoroughbred and quarter horses race, their great pulmonary power can cause breakage in the alveoli and surrounding capillaries inside their lungs due to a shortfall in needed oxygen gas exchange. The non-uncommon side effect of “exercise-induced pulmonary hemorrhaging”  can result in bleeding out of the horse’s nostrils after a race. We think the active oxygen in Watt-Ahh would deliver the extra oxygen to support the tremendous lung powerhouses of racing horses and perhaps “bleeder” horses can continue their racing careers longer.

One owner who we know, arranged for nostril surgery on his race horse to open up the air passages; a surgery that may or may not be conventional to avoid hemorrhaging. He ordered many gallons of Watt-Ahh during the horse’s recovery which was faster than expected. The jockey told the trainer, after the first post-surgery practice run, that he was not strong enough on the reins to hold back the horse on its speed. The horse was ready to go!

Whatever your favorite Ungulate for racing, we think Watt-Ahh can power these strong animals on the course to get crowning wins and major prize monies plus avoid pulmonary injuries.

For the entire 2025 Series on Be the Ahh! Pets, go to this link.

Sharing AHA! Discoveries

Do you have a “AHA!” Discovery to share for a longer and healthier life (and also for your pets) or a cleaner environment? Or, do you have a discovery story to share on a different topic?