Pet Lovers Discussion Forum

Dogs & Puppies List Dogs Add your Website
Sign In Place an Ad Link to Us

Pet Lovers Discussion Forum

You are here
Puppies Pet Lovers Discussion Forum View Topic
Welcome, Guest ( Login or Register )
Several natural methods of flea prevention
 naturaldane
 Posted 4/22/2008 2:28:17 PM   
3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts
Active: 08-13-2006
Posts: 3012
This is copied off a site I found that isnt one Im able to post a link off of, Im not going to edit the exact words so when it says I, its not meaning myself.

Eucalyptus Leaves

The answer is eucalyptus leaves. You can get them at any craft store. For some reason the fleas don't like the smell of it. I used this for many years when I lived in California. I had a Dog and 2 cats and a toddler! Safe for the kids and the environment.
Paula

Sprinkle the Borax

Borax is great for fleas. It is not toxic and you can sprinkle it on your carpet. Let it sit for a few days and then vacuum it up. You can sprinkle it around the fence of your yard too. I understand that using Skin So Soft from Avon on the animals' coats will repel fleas and mosquitoes. It is also good for the kids skin but just make sure you get the original from Avon.
PW

DE Cheaper to Sprinkle

An inexpensive way to rid your yard of fleas is to sprinkle DE (diatomaceous Earth) all over the yard. You can buy a large bag for just a few dollars at any swimming pool supply store. It is used normally as part of the filtration system for swimming pools.
Steve

Cedar Chips as Repellent

Putting cedar chips along your fence line will keep the fleas from other people's yards out of your yard, as cedar repels fleas.
Tulsa

Herbal Control

I worked with a man who had bird dogs and his wife was a student in plant sciences. They found that planting tansy (an herb) around the dogs' pens kept the problem in check. Their children played in the same yard as the dogs. And they were not bitten at all. Maybe this would be a safe and effective way for the woman with the neighboring flea problem. And not be harmful to her child.
Meissa

To be cont.
 naturaldane
 Posted 4/22/2008 3:51:35 PM   
3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts
Active: 08-13-2006
Posts: 3012
Set A Trap

I read this in a Mother Earth News Magazine about 15 years ago and it works great. At night you put a dinner plate on the floor (preferably in the room with the worst flea problem) and put a drop of dish soap in some water on the plate. Put a lamp on the floor next to the plate. The fleas are attracted to the light and jump on the plate. Without the dish soap the water surface tension is enough that they can jump off but with the soap the sink and drown. If this is done for several nights eventually all the fleas will be gone unless more are brought in.
Joanne

Words From Experience

Fleas are dangerous pests. They continue sucking blood even when full, because their larva feed on the blood that they pass with their stool. Fleas carry tapeworms, and a bad infestation can cause serious loss of blood. Puppies and kittens can die from flea caused anemia.

Any insecticide you use will be absorbed through your skin and the animal's skin, and be breathed by you, the kids, and the animal. Our San Diego fleas are resistant to most insecticides. The ones that work are either really strong or act as hormones, with unknown long term effects on people. The borax/repellent approach described here is much safer.

The following has worked for us for the past 10 years, and we have three large outdoor dogs and an outdoor cat.

 naturaldane
 Posted 4/22/2008 3:52:18 PM   
3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts
Active: 08-13-2006
Posts: 3012
Vacuum the house thoroughly, including floors and furniture. This will get any loose flea eggs, larvae, and adults. Dispose of the vacuum bag in a sealed plastic bag. Otherwise, the fleas you catch will hop out (they go toward light).


Make a 50/50 mixture of 20 Mule Team Borax (the boxed laundry product), and diatomaceous earth. The diatomaceous earth is available cheaply wherever swimming pool supplies are sold, including most supermarkets and drug stores. It is also called swimming pool filter earth. Pure borax will also work but will cost a bit more.


Make a dust can by punching or drilling a bunch of holes in the base of a container. A used quart yogurt or cottage cheese container, with the top, is perfect. Medium dust all carpets and hidden nooks and crannies of furniture, closets, and wherever else larval fleas might be hiding (they eat dust and detritus). I like to sweep the powder into the carpets with a push broom and not vacuum the rugs for several days so the dust can really sift down.


Do not breathe this dust or get it on the skin. This isn't a systemic poison like insecticides but it is irritating to the eyes, skin, and lungs. For this reason, be sure the kids and animals are out of the house while you dust. Do not use this dust outside or on houseplants. The borax will harm any plants it contacts. I wrestle with the dogs on the rug after dusting, and don't notice any irritation from that small contact.


To keep fleas off of pets or kids when they are outside, thin slice a lemon or lime (peals and all) into two cups of water. Heat the water to boiling and let sit overnight. Sponge the child or pet in the morning with the lemon scented water, and let it dry. It will soothe the skin, smell really nice, and keep the fleas off for about 1/2 a day.


Lemon grass (also called citronella, available from Asian markets) would probably work even better. I use commercial citronella based insect repellents to keep off ticks, mosquitoes, and other biters when hiking. It seems to work as good as DEET, but is safe and smells nice. It only lasts about 2 hours. A weak solution of eucalyptus oil and/or pennyroyal oil also works, but may irritate the skin.

We have found that outside fleas get on the dogs and cats, come into the house on them, jump off and die. We have almost no fleas in the house or yard (we do not spread poisons on our yard), and we take our dogs hiking once or twice a week.

 naturaldane
 Posted 4/22/2008 3:53:23 PM   
3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts3001 - 4000 posts
Active: 08-13-2006
Posts: 3012
I find skin so soft with tea tree oil works very well in repelling fleas and skeeters.
 boswer
 Posted 4/22/2008 6:09:30 PM   
501 - 750 posts501 - 750 posts501 - 750 posts501 - 750 posts501 - 750 posts
Active: 03-12-2007
Posts: 726
Quote naturaldane: This is copied off a site I found that isnt one Im able to post a link off of, Im not going to edit the exact words so when it says I, its not meaning myself.

Eucalyptus Leaves

The answer is eucalyptus...

There is a new chemical flea prevention out there called Promax which is causing near deaths already and put a lady in the hospital. Lady had 12 dogs everyone of them ended up in the emergency room and cost 2600.00. Ft. Dodge is reimbursing her for the expenses incurred. So they are admitting liability. But Vets are still selling it and there is no recall on this poison. Stay away from chemical flea prevention. Safer for the dogs to have fleas then die.
Boswer
  
Posts on this forum do not imply endorsement by the site, they are the sole expressed views of the original poster.

Dogs & Puppies - Next Day Pets

Dogs & Puppies - Next Day Pets
HACKER SAFE certified sites prevent over 99.9% of hacker crime.
Puppies for Sale
PuppyMatch
Dog Breeders
Dog Rescue
Dogs Wanted
Dog Breeds
Dog Names
Dog Pictures
Dog & Pet - Friendly Hotels
Pet Supplies
Dog T-Shirts
Pet Lovers Forum
Pet Website Directory
Dog WebRings
Place an Ad
Advertising Info
Next Day Pets Home
Sign In
Cool Features
 Dog Website Directory
Increase your website traffic for your dogs or pets related website.
Add your website
 Pet-Dog Friendly Hotels
Traveling soon? Bring your pet along. Search for hotels that accept pets. Make your reservation today.
Pet & Dog Friendly Hotels
Beagle
Boxer
Bulldog
Chihuahua
Dachshund
German Shepherd
Golden Retriever
Labrador Retriever
Maltese
Poodle
Pomeranian
Pitbull
Pug
Rottweiler
Shih Tzu
Yorkie
Essential Supplies
shop for
Dog Collars

Dog Collars
shop for
Flea & Tick Control

Flea & Tick Control
shop for
Dog Clothes

Dog Clothes
shop for
Dog Toys

Dog Toys


contact us | terms | privacy policy | menu | site map | puppies | dog supplies | dog breeders | careers
 
Copyright © 2003-2008 Next Day Pets, L.L.C., All Rights Reserved