Menopause Matters Forum
General Discussion => This 'n' That => Topic started by: ellie on August 05, 2014, 08:16:17 AM
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I had to take my little dog to the vets yesterday, she had a tick on her eyelid, very close to her eyelashes....I would normally remove a tick myself but not one so close to her eye.....
Would advise anyone with pets to check them carefully...My dog had been treated for fleas and ticks, but they can still pick ticks up.
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Hope your dog is ok - like you we normally remove ticks ourselves but right next to the eye would make me visit a vet as well I think.
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Our dog used to get them but only when we were in the Lakes ::) and I began to recognise them as small black dots scurrying around. If they fed and became blue and squishy I would use alcohol/Nuvantop sprap apart from the one over her eye. The vet put something cold onto a cotton bud and held it agains the blue tick body.
Many years ago I used Nuvantop on a tick and it fell off - somewhere in the carpets :o
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Ugh, ticks, vile things >:(
A tick twister is supposedly the best thing to use to remove ticks completely including the head. I keep one in my rucksack when we go trekking, just in case.
The lovely veterinary nurses where I work use tick twisters to good effect and don't charge for removal. :D
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Our Vet nurse also did it free.....I also have a tick remover, that way you can be sure to get the whole thing out.
I had treated our dog only two weeks ago against ticks and flees, but the nurse was saying always check as it doesn't always work against ticks.... And that was proved on our dog.
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Oh dear ::) none of the chemicals that we put onto our pets will prevent ticks, fleas etc. jumping on, taking a bite and jumping off again. What the chemicals should do is stop those infestations breeding. Some interrupt the breeding cycle, others simple poison the critter trying to take a feed.
Sadly my dog died of lymphoma and I do wonder if all the chemicals added to her system was the cause :-\. Also frontline almost killed my little cat ……...
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Sorry about your cat CLKD........
Until a better solution comes about, what can we do but treat our pets against the nasty critters.
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I gave my dog garlic capsules. Supposed to keep fleas away which is why long dogs often wear bandanas which are soaked in garlic oil. One can buy very good flea combs and 'buzzes' which is what I used subsequently. I wouldn't use chemicals again unless I could see fleas etc. and for ticks would use a 'Q'-tip soaked in alcohol, spot on to the tick body. My dog had a pale coat so fleas were easy to spot and very therapeutic to remove ;)
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Ok yuk, I know I wouldn't find it therapeutic picking flees off my dog, and don't want them getting in the carpets etc....
Couldn't use a flee comb on her as her fur is thick and long,,and garlic pearls didnt work on our last dog.....but my DH takes them and he hasn't got fleas :)
So although I don't like using flee treatments, I see no option sadly :(
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I keep my dog out of long grass in the summer and that reduces the risk.
I agree about picking flees of a dog's coat. Yuk. First sign of flees and they would be treated damn quick. How would you know they were not falling onto your carpet. Makes me itch just thinking about it.
I wonder if a tea tree oil shampoo might work. Did the trick with my kids when they were small.......never had any head lice. ;D
I use frontline and always have done..Always worked on my dogs.
Honeyb
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Awwww poor dog. I hate it when I get right deep in the garden borders as I always think a tick will jump on me! Nasty creatures, I use advocate or frontline. When we first moved here there where fleas in the attic & it took us a while to realise we where bringing them down every time we went up pre having a new roof & getting rid of the birds nests. We frontlined old Timmy & let him wander about upstairs & they went!!! B x
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Do you know what ladies.........I am ITCHING like crazy :rofl:
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;D ……. do you know that fleas, if flushed down the loo, can remain on the surface tension of the water and if flushed in the sink, they jump back up and land on the ceramic :D ………… I used to take fleas out of the coat and dip them into a tall glass of cold water. Therapeutic. If you want fleas removed, I'm your Girl ;)
Chemicals - would you put them onto your skin, we see so much here about not using parabens etc. on ourselves ……… :-\ ……. do you use chemicals on your animals on an 'probable' basis or when you see critters in the coat ………
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I treat my dog twice a year with Frontline. I have always flee treated my dogs and I've had a good few over the years. Up till now none of my dogs have ever had flees.
To hand pick them out and then drown them......Sorry CLKD that's disgusting and given the fact there are probably thousands..... :-\. Life is way too short unless you are a monkey.
As for putting chemicals on your skin. Yes, we all do every day, skin creams, body lotions, shampoo, bubble bath,. Toothpaste, deodorant, hair removal cream. I could go on........Flee treatment.....ummm, don't think it's any worse. Our animals have a whole lot fewer chemicals put on them in a day/week/year.....than we do.
Honeyb
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;D honeybun ....you just saying '' unless you are a Monkey '' ......has got me laughing again..
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It's what they do ellie. ;D. It's what they do.
;D
Honeyb
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Not all GPs are aware of Lyme disease :-\
I never got 1000s of fleas off our pets, the most of the cat was 22 in one go …….. he was almost completely white and had been near a hedge hog ::) ……… therapeutic sitting in the sun picking them out ……. when we went rabbiting with the dogs they would come out of the holes with fleas …… again, never many, enough to need picking off, job done. I would never use chemicals unless they became a problem, however, the flea cycle includes the tape worm :sick02: so if a pet is infested with fleas, a tape-worm treatment, usually by injection is also required. Nature is fascinating ;)
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You use chemicals on yourself CLKD, why not on a dog or cat.
Rabbiting....very cruel I think. Not a quick death. I take it you ate the rabbit.
My hubby shoots but never ever shoots something that won't be eaten.
Honeyb
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Rabbits die quickly at the teeth of a ferret or JR ;) ……. we only take what we are going to use for the pot.
Because pets don't have a choice as to what is put into their bodies or onto their fur, therefore unless there is a lot of critters I prefer to use finger and thumb ;) ………. hunter gathering ……… :-X
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I did post before and then removed it as I wanted to speak to hubby.
He is mystified CLKD. He hunted rabbits, hares pheasants ect since he was about 14.
He has also been with people who use dogs. He tells me that the dog users, use them to flush rabbits out and never to kill. He says if they do kill they are disciplined as then the meat is ruined.
He is interested in how it works when you say....You only take what you can use for the pot.
It was just a conversation that we had tonight and I probably learned way more than i wanted to know about how a rabbit has to be treated immediately after a kill if you want to eat it. :o. I really did not want to know this ;D
Honeyb
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;D ........... there's a special phrase which escapes me ....... but it can be messy :-X
We used ferrets to flush out rabbits, nets 1 side of the warren and the JR nipped them in the back of the neck as they ran out. Instant.
Exactly what I mean - if we go after pheasants we shoot 2/3 brace - enough for the pot and a couple of the freezer, dependant on how many mouths we are feeding. For example a friend has a whole pheasant to himself :o ;D ... fish the same, 1 for the oven, another for the freezer. We bred rabbits for several years, the doe threw 11 at a time - raised until 5lb then ........... :-X ....... bartered for chicken/eggs/cheese/pet sitting oh we was young then ::)
I took a cat to the Vet today and surprisingly she didn't want to treat it - yet. A watch and wait situation. She used a very good flea comb on t he areas that the cat has been cleaning a lot and only a few dirts came out and even she admitted it could have been blood from where the cat had scratched rather than from a flea. Teeth good. Appetite, not so good :-\
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What type of guns do you and hubby use CLKD? Didn't know you were into shooting.
We have a country park next door to us where they breed pheasants for the annual shoots. Hubby gets to use a Browning which he seemingly loves. He gave up keeping guns at home when the kids were small and it all became very complicated. They were sold many years ago. I think he shed a tear or two when his Browning went. I was a dreadful shot. Think of barn door and I would miss it ;D
How do you and hubby manage the gun laws these days. I know hubby still has a hankering but it's almost impossible.
Good news about the cat. Wait and see is so much cheaper ;D
Honeyb
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