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Ticks!
568Ticks!
Here’s how to keep the nasty bloodsuckers at bay
with the least possible risk to you and your pets
Q. Is there any product that
can be put on lawns to kill ticks? I am against chemicals, because we
have a cat, a golden retriever and a koi pond. But I am very afraid of
ticks and will not even go on my grass because I don’t want to risk
getting Lyme disease. (Our dog gets a Lyme vaccination every year.) I
know you have stated that ticks are not found on lawns, but my dog had
surgery, and I found a tick on the sticky tape holding the plastic bag
on her paw. I did read your tick advice from last year,
and found a garlic-based mosquito repelling lawn spray at a local feed
store. But the man there recommended Zodiac yard spray instead. Is this
safe for a dog and cat that play on the grass?
---D. N. in NJ
A. Don’t feel
bad, D.N.; many people greatly fear ticks. But it sounds like at least
some of your fears are misdirected. I urge you to read up on the habits
of these nasty little blood suckers; the knowledge you gain may or may
not help you get over a little of your fear, but it will certainly help
you better know when to be afraid.
For instance, ticks do not hunt on groomed lawns; they climb plants a
foot or two high and wait for a mammal to come along they can attach
themselves to. The rare tick on a lawn could have just fallen off a
pet, wild animal, human or other victim; or (folks with parasitosis may
want to skip to the next paragraph here) dropped down off a tree
branch, which ticks frequently do in search of prey. People pick up the
vast majority of ticks walking through woods, weeds or brush; well-kept
lawns are pretty safe.
Last year’s Question of the Week on ticks went into a lot of detail on
personal protection; click here
to read that archived advice, and then you can come back and continue
reading this year’s follow up.
Oh, and I hope you’re aware that your dog’s vaccine doesn’t do a thing
to prevent him from being bitten by ticks or bringing them into the
house; only a specific flea and tick product can do that. Bill Quarles,
director of the Bio Integral Research Center (BIRC www.birc.org) in Berkeley,
California—specialists in ‘least toxic’ controls for noxious pests—and
Dr. Lisa Murphy, assistant professor of toxicology at the University of
Pennsylvania Veterinary School’s New Bolton Center, both recommend
“Frontline”, one of those newer-style ‘spot on’ flea and tick
repellants.
Dr. Murphy explains that Frontline’s active ingredient, fipronil, binds
GABA receptors, whose shape in mammals is vastly different from those
of fleas and ticks, making it safe for us but toxic to those—are you
ready?—“ectoparasites”.
(WHO you gonna call?! TICK—Busters!” Sorry.)
Anyway, both Dr. Murphy and Bill Quarles assure me that, right now, it
is the product that most reliably kills fleas and ticks with the most
minimal risk to you and your pets. (Both also add that they are only
speaking of Frontline—which is only available by prescription from a
veterinarian—and share serious concerns about the active ingredients in
some of the other ‘spot on’ type flea and tick treatments out there.)
Yes, it is HIGHLY unusual for me to recommend ANY synthetic chemical.
But ticks pose real health problems, and no good organic controls yet
exist. So, to borrow a favorite phrase from my good buddy Bill Quarles,
this is the ‘least toxic’ method we know of right now.
That Zodiac yard spray is not. Its active ingredient is permethrin, a
synthetic chemical I do recommend in two very different ways to control
ticks, but NOT in a lawn spray, where it poses a serious risk to your
cat, a huge one to your fish, and an unknown but very real one to you.
It would be much wiser to treat some clothes with one of the .5%
permethrin sprays we recommend in last year’s
Question and wear them when you go outdoors. Ticks will not come
near you; you only spray your clothing, not your skin or your
environment; and one treatment lasts two weeks, even when the clothes
are washed.
Q. Hi Mike: I read your Question of the
Week recommending the use of “tick tubes” and am considering
purchasing some. However, I have read that their active ingredient,
permethrin, is extremely toxic to cats. I have two indoor/outdoor cats
that often hunt mice. If a cat eats a mouse that has been in contact
with one of the treated cotton balls, will they be affected?
---Kathy in Harpers Ferry, West Virginia
Thank you, Kath. I’ll be perfectly honest here—I know about the
potential for permethrin to cause problems for cats, have often
wondered about this myself, but have kind of avoided dealing with it.
However, you’ve now shamed me into seeking out an answer, which the
aforementioned Dr. Murphy has been kind enough to provide.
Daminex (or Damminix) Tick Tubes are little cardboard tubes filled with
cotton balls that have been soaked with a 7.4% concentration of
permethrin. Field mice—the most reliable source of the ticks that carry
Lyme disease—take the cotton back to their nests to use as bedding,
where the permethrin kills any ticks that come into that nest. Sold in
sets of 24, the tubes are available at some retail outlets, and you can
order them on the web at http://www.garden-shops.com/ticktubes.html,
or by calling a very dedicated supplier toll-free at his New England
B& B: 866-401-9455 (“Chase House”).
Yes, there have been reports of cats having very bad reactions to
permethrin. Luckily, Dr. Murphy explains that these have caused by
highly concentrated permethrin products (a whopping 45 to 65%!) meant
to only be applied to dogs, like ‘Hartz Control One Spot’ and ‘Zodiac
Fleatrol Spot On’. But because they are the same kind of ‘spot on’
product as Frontline, and because the warnings on those tiny little
packages can be hard to read, people have mistakenly used them on
felines. “And just one drop is enough to cause serious problems for a
cat”, warns Dr. Murphy. In fact, she advises cat owners not to even use
them on their dogs. “A cat could be badly injured just rubbing
against a dog that’s been treated with a 45% permethrin product”, she
warns.
But she doesn’t feel the tick tube cotton balls will cause cats any
such problem; the dose of permethrin is much lower, and it isn’t
actually applied to the mouse. Likewise, she has no problem with the
home-made ‘tick-proofing mouse runs’ we described last year,
where you line the inside of a pipe with fabric treated with a .5%
clothing spray (or Garden's Alive "Pyola",
which is also a .5% conentration of permethrin when mixed with water at
the recommend level) to give any mice that hide inside a de-ticking.
“That low a dose is very safe”, she says.
But she adds that she also simply prefers fipronil to permethrin as a
flea and tick controller. In fact, were it not a violation of Federal
law to recommend any non-labeled use of a pesticide, we might even
suggest using a drop of fipronil on cotton balls or pipe lining instead
of permetrhin. Unfortunately, that Federal law prevents us from making
such a suggestion. Ahem.
You Bet Your Garden Question of the Week ©2005
Mike McGrath
Helpful
Products From Gardens Alive!
Try these goods to help Terminate Terrifying Ticks Today!
Liquid
Rotenone with Pyrethrin
Spray Pesticide
Rotenone and Pyrethrin is an Effective Broad-spectrum combination. This
is a very handy pesticide which is known to even Kill Ticks!. Also
kills Aphids, thrips, Japanese beetles, and much more!
Pyola
Insecticidal Spray
Pyola is a spray that combines Pyrethrin, a popular insecticide derived
from pyrethrum flowers, with canola oil. Try a little of this in your
home made "Tick Traps!”
Pest Barrier Sticky Glue
Non-toxic Barrier to catch pests
Place around trees, shrubs, vines, and even your picnic table! A 2 inch
band of glue stops things like ants, beetles, mites - Virtually all
crawling insects.
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