I have a friend who bought a warmblood in horrible shape out of a killpen in Bastrop LA. He is 8 and the microchip starts with 99100. She has check 30 different databases and nothing comes up. What good is a microchip you can’t find info on? It also has a what appears to be a homemade brand that looks like Bar S but the one Bar S ranch she found , it is not theirs.
Someone just posted a brand that looks the same located in KS so we’ll see if that pans out.
The tricky thing about microchips is they have to be registered. A lot of people don’t know that, so never do it.
You can search all the databases here:
https://www.aaha.org/your-pet/pet-microchip-lookup/microchip-search/
The full microchip number is 991001005299074. @Simkie I used the link you sent, it sent me to 2 others but came up with nothing.
It’s an unregistered Peeva chip. You might be able to call them and find out where it was sold to. If direct to a vet, the vet might have a record of who it was used on.
Agree with Simkie, that is the best way to go, a reverse tracking
Peeva texted the lady back and said it wasn’t their chip.
990 may be nanochip; 15-digit begins 990 NANOCHIPID.com
or ViaGuard Online only (Nano) 877-842-4827 (Via)
this is a very similar problem we had with the horses rounded up after hurricane Katrina. At that time there were three chip variations requiring three different chip readers…but even so few if any of the horses were chip
My grand daughters’ goat had to be microchipped for interstate shipping …they Had to have the chip reader with them for use by any ag agent inspecting the goats to verify the goat on the health papers was the proper goat.
So long story shorter, we have our own chip reader now… cheap these days at under $100