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How to fight fleas The natural way:
• Vacuum your home frequently and seal
vacuum bags before disposing.
• Wash the bedding of your dog weekly in
warm soapy water. This is where fleas
usually breed.
• Bathing your pet weekly with a mild
dog shampoo prevents flea invasion.
• Use cedar shampoo for your dog, and
put cedar oil in their sleeping mats.
Cedar will repel fleas and other
insects.
• Fleas are attracted to dry skin, so to
avoid it, give your dog Linatone oil
mixed with its food. Excessive
shampooing should be avoided.
• A mixture of brewer’s yeast and
garlic, available in powder or tablet
form can be given in small doses to your
pet. This creates a certain odor in
pets, and fleas are surely to avoid
them.
• Fresh or dried pennyroyal leaves is a
natural flea repellent. Use this in
carpets to avoid the abundance of fleas
in the home. Do not use it if you have
small children around, as this could be
toxic.
• A mixture of 60 ml of lavender oil
with 2.8 liters of rock salt can also be
placed in areas where dogs usually come
in contact with and this solution could
also be used to wash your dog.
• Planting marigolds in the yard is
helpful too, it repels certain types of
bugs as well as fleas.
• Boiled lemon or orange peel in water
can be used as a dip for dogs and can be
used too to soak in dog bedding for a
few hours, then washed with warm soapy
water.
• Lukewarm water with little shampoo and
detergent is a good way to prevent
fleas. A dog’s body may be dipped into
the solution for fifteen minutes and
then rinsed. This only works if flea
infestation is light.
The natural way of treating fleas is
effective only if the level of flea
infestation is average to very few. This
method usually is recommended for
prevention only.
Read more about dog allergies and
training at
http://www.gamebird-hunter.com/Hunting-dogs.html
Different commercially available
products with chemical contents:
• Advantage. Active ingredient is
imidacloprid. This is a flea poison,
from Bayer. It is in a liquid form and
applied to the skin, at the back of the
dog, and works for about a month. This
works by upsetting the nervous system of
fleas when they come in contact with the
liquid. This product is fast acting and
is not absorbed into the internal organs
and bloodstream of the dog.
Studies indicate that this product is
highly toxic to fleas and other insects
as well. A dog will be free from fleas
in just a couple of days.
Ingredients are: imidacloprid -- a
chloronicotinyl nitroguanidine
integrated from the nitromethylene class
of a compound. This joins the nicotinyl
receptor sites of insects, thus
upsetting normal nerve transmission
which causes death.
A set of two vials costs 15-20 dollars.
• Frontline. This product is very
similar to Advantage, but is not water
soluble, so alcohol is needed to wash it
off. This can safely be used in pups,
dogs, cats and kittens.
Efficiency in repelling lasts up to four
months.
Active ingredients include: Fipronil
5-amino -1- (2, 6-dichloro-4 [trifluoromethyl]phenyl)
-4- (1,R,S)- (trifluoromethyl0sulfinyl)
-1H-pryazole-3-carbonitrile 0.29% inert
ingredients 99.71%.
Fipronil works as a nervous transmission
interruptor, which causes quick death to
fleas and ticks. It is proven to kills
96% of fleas for the first two hours and
100% within 24 hours. Ticks die sooner
than they attach themselves to the host.
Fipronil is from the new phenylpyrazole
class.
Very effective and can be considered
safe, so long as dogs are not allergic
to fipronil.
• Knockout. Performs like Frontline and
is as effective, but can only be used in
dogs. Active ingredients: Pyriproxyfen:
21[1-methyl-2-(phenoxyphenoxy)ethyoxy]
pyridine....0.05%
cyclopropanecarboxylate 2.00% inert
ingredients 97.95% Also has NYLAR, which
is flea growth regulator.
• Biospot. This is for topical
application and kills up to 75 percent
of fleas, eggs, and ticks. It also is a
good repellant of mosquitoes and works
for about a month. Temporarily, at
times, it turns white hair to yellow.
This can not be used in cats and
contains permethrins and IGR.
• Proban (cythioate) and Prospot (Fenthion).
While not to be used in cats, they are
widely used in dogs. This is absorbed by
the bloodstream and fleas die due to the
poison that is present in the blood. For
it to work, it requires the bitting of
fleas. There are certain conditions to
be considered though. You are injecting
a small dose of poison into your dog’s
body and side effects are not known.
Then this does not help if a dog has
flea allergy, and can not risk to be
bitten.
Generally fleas abound during the summer
months, when it is their breeding
season. These commercial products can
greatly help in fighting heavy flea
infestation and needed where severe
invasion occurs. However, it is always
best to consult with your veterinarian
as the choice of flea control will
greatly depend on your life style.
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