|
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
"madgardener" wrote in message .. . If you're using Frontline tick drops it absolutely KILLS the ticks. I don't use Advantage. Doesn't work. madgardener who hasn't had ticks on Rose or her felines since using Frontline drops that comes in a three pack. Yep, Frontline all the way. We have 3 dogs, well 4 up until last week. All the dogs are over the 44 lbs size so the Frontline is the medium size and expensive. I get it online much cheaper than at the vet! Judy "Judy and Dave G" wrote in message ... Hello all. Good lord. I have seen more ticks so far this year than I have ever seen before. We moved to this farm 10 years ago. Took me a couple years to be able to pick a tick off and kill it. Still can't touch those darn swelled up, grayish green ones. Dave's gotta get them. Our farm is about 60 acres, on a hillside, from the creek at the bottom to the ridge at the top. I hate snakes and ticks. I read somewhere, sometime that if you mow areas close to your home that snakes and ticks shouldn't be a problem. Well, I get a bit carried away. I mow about 3 acres in the bottoms, about an acre around the house, then a 30 foot path up to the top of the hill with about an acre by the bees, an acre at the first leveling, and about 3 acres in the top field by the pond. So you can pretty much walk everywhere that is comfortable (some of the hillside is really a bit too steep for comfort) and not be close to high grass. Even at the middle of the path, the higher grass is 15 feet away. Now, when I am mowing, I am fair game to the ticks. Because I am sitting on the lawn tractor and brushing right past all the weeds, berries and ivy and ducking under the trees. But, if I walk out the front door, down the walk, onto the gravel drive, down to the road for the mail, (about 300 feet) and back up to the house: I have at least 3, count em, 3 friggin ticks on me. Geez. We use flea and tick drops on the dogs. We have 3 dogs now. Apparently the drops don't deter the ticks from getting on the dogs. If you sit on the porch and swing, the dogs will come over and need a pat. You can SEE the friggin ticks walking around on their fur, the only dead ones are the ones that are attached. And this is only May for cripes sake. Doesn't look to be a real comfortable summer. Gonna be feeling and scratching and picking. Gross. Yuck. Anyone else in the country and noticing ticks are pretty bad this year? I am in Kentucky. Judy |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
The
vet said to not switch to advantage because I would lose the protection from heartworm and ear mites. Advantage makes heartworm medcine not work????? Noooo. Advantage doesn't have heartworm preventative. Also, revolution is a topical and not an internal as is Advantage. Revolution protects against everything (heartworm, ear mites, fleas and deer ticks among others) common to the wonderous beasts (Cats & Dogs). Sad that I can't get hens in the city without really "ticking" off the neighbors. LOLOL Just my 2 cents......... Christine |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
"Guinea hens are known to have a voracious appetite for ticks, so some folks in
tick infested areas buy them for that purpose. Susan" AND "Go 5 mile out of town and you see more and more guinea fowl which on a restricted diet can reduce tick populations by about 80%" Hi Folks - Yes. Get some guineas! Both these quotes are true I'd say - as we've had between 6 - 24 guineas almost constantly running loose (they over winter and roost in a good sized chicken house) for over two dozen years here on my Ozark beef farm and believe me the ticks have been NOTICEABLY reduced in number! This is apparently how it works - 1/ guinea walks by the tick on the leaf - the tick jumps onto the guinea - 2/ guinea preens itself regularly - finds tick - 3/ eats tick. Aslo fattened ticks collecting where animals often sleep are a thick juicy snack for a guinea - also of cardinals I might add. So - over a period of years this repetitive guinea process severely eats into the tick population (unless God forgid - rabbits are ever allowed free birthing rights in rampant blackberry patches by certain overly sensitive types who love 'cute' more than good sense.) Now lo and behold - we are seldom adversely affected by excessive ticks anywhere near our house - although one or two will appear occasionally no matter what it seems. Guineas are however often noisy - and sometimes here they can get shot dead if they overly indulge in any monotony of racket - causing the evolution of quieter and quieter farm guneas - one would hope. G Actually when they 'pair off' (married???) they can become quite settled and peaceful - making a pleasant kind of gentle peeping sound as they walk by ever scanning the grass for bugs. We like the natural 'pearl' kind - like you see on Natiuonal Geographic shows about Africa - I wouldn't want a weird purple or mauve or white one on the place - (unless G they were also quieter). - Wes/MO |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
Guinea fowl are wonderful, we used them all the time for our garden, yard
and around our boarding kennel. Never had a trace of a tick and besides they aerate the garden for you to some extent. We lived on 40 acres with about 10 of it being thick trees, the kennel was beside the wooded area and after turning loose the guinea's we had no problems with ticks or fleas anywhere. Kathy "lwr" wrote in message ... "Guinea hens are known to have a voracious appetite for ticks, so some folks in tick infested areas buy them for that purpose. Susan" AND "Go 5 mile out of town and you see more and more guinea fowl which on a restricted diet can reduce tick populations by about 80%" Hi Folks - Yes. Get some guineas! Both these quotes are true I'd say - as we've had between 6 - 24 guineas almost constantly running loose (they over winter and roost in a good sized chicken house) for over two dozen years here on my Ozark beef farm and believe me the ticks have been NOTICEABLY reduced in number! This is apparently how it works - 1/ guinea walks by the tick on the leaf - the tick jumps onto the guinea - 2/ guinea preens itself regularly - finds tick - 3/ eats tick. Aslo fattened ticks collecting where animals often sleep are a thick juicy snack for a guinea - also of cardinals I might add. So - over a period of years this repetitive guinea process severely eats into the tick population (unless God forgid - rabbits are ever allowed free birthing rights in rampant blackberry patches by certain overly sensitive types who love 'cute' more than good sense.) Now lo and behold - we are seldom adversely affected by excessive ticks anywhere near our house - although one or two will appear occasionally no matter what it seems. Guineas are however often noisy - and sometimes here they can get shot dead if they overly indulge in any monotony of racket - causing the evolution of quieter and quieter farm guneas - one would hope. G Actually when they 'pair off' (married???) they can become quite settled and peaceful - making a pleasant kind of gentle peeping sound as they walk by ever scanning the grass for bugs. We like the natural 'pearl' kind - like you see on Natiuonal Geographic shows about Africa - I wouldn't want a weird purple or mauve or white one on the place - (unless G they were also quieter). - Wes/MO |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
Where on line?
On Mon, 5 May 2003 21:43:40 -0400, "Judy and Dave G" wrote: "madgardener" wrote in message . .. If you're using Frontline tick drops it absolutely KILLS the ticks. I don't use Advantage. Doesn't work. madgardener who hasn't had ticks on Rose or her felines since using Frontline drops that comes in a three pack. Yep, Frontline all the way. We have 3 dogs, well 4 up until last week. All the dogs are over the 44 lbs size so the Frontline is the medium size and expensive. I get it online much cheaper than at the vet! Judy "Judy and Dave G" wrote in message ... Hello all. Good lord. I have seen more ticks so far this year than I have ever seen before. We moved to this farm 10 years ago. Took me a couple years to be able to pick a tick off and kill it. Still can't touch those darn swelled up, grayish green ones. Dave's gotta get them. Our farm is about 60 acres, on a hillside, from the creek at the bottom to the ridge at the top. I hate snakes and ticks. I read somewhere, sometime that if you mow areas close to your home that snakes and ticks shouldn't be a problem. Well, I get a bit carried away. I mow about 3 acres in the bottoms, about an acre around the house, then a 30 foot path up to the top of the hill with about an acre by the bees, an acre at the first leveling, and about 3 acres in the top field by the pond. So you can pretty much walk everywhere that is comfortable (some of the hillside is really a bit too steep for comfort) and not be close to high grass. Even at the middle of the path, the higher grass is 15 feet away. Now, when I am mowing, I am fair game to the ticks. Because I am sitting on the lawn tractor and brushing right past all the weeds, berries and ivy and ducking under the trees. But, if I walk out the front door, down the walk, onto the gravel drive, down to the road for the mail, (about 300 feet) and back up to the house: I have at least 3, count em, 3 friggin ticks on me. Geez. We use flea and tick drops on the dogs. We have 3 dogs now. Apparently the drops don't deter the ticks from getting on the dogs. If you sit on the porch and swing, the dogs will come over and need a pat. You can SEE the friggin ticks walking around on their fur, the only dead ones are the ones that are attached. And this is only May for cripes sake. Doesn't look to be a real comfortable summer. Gonna be feeling and scratching and picking. Gross. Yuck. Anyone else in the country and noticing ticks are pretty bad this year? I am in Kentucky. Judy |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
I bought tick killing granules you apply to the ground. It worked where
ever you put them down. After 4 years of doing that, I moved to Western Kansas. They don't even know what tick granules are around here. Been here nearly 2 years now and haven't seen a tick or chigger in all that time. Have fun, Dwayne "Judy and Dave G" wrote in message ... Hello all. Good lord. I have seen more ticks so far this year than I have ever seen before. We moved to this farm 10 years ago. Took me a couple years to be able to pick a tick off and kill it. Still can't touch those darn swelled up, grayish green ones. Dave's gotta get them. Our farm is about 60 acres, on a hillside, from the creek at the bottom to the ridge at the top. I hate snakes and ticks. I read somewhere, sometime that if you mow areas close to your home that snakes and ticks shouldn't be a problem. Well, I get a bit carried away. I mow about 3 acres in the bottoms, about an acre around the house, then a 30 foot path up to the top of the hill with about an acre by the bees, an acre at the first leveling, and about 3 acres in the top field by the pond. So you can pretty much walk everywhere that is comfortable (some of the hillside is really a bit too steep for comfort) and not be close to high grass. Even at the middle of the path, the higher grass is 15 feet away. Now, when I am mowing, I am fair game to the ticks. Because I am sitting on the lawn tractor and brushing right past all the weeds, berries and ivy and ducking under the trees. But, if I walk out the front door, down the walk, onto the gravel drive, down to the road for the mail, (about 300 feet) and back up to the house: I have at least 3, count em, 3 friggin ticks on me. Geez. We use flea and tick drops on the dogs. We have 3 dogs now. Apparently the drops don't deter the ticks from getting on the dogs. If you sit on the porch and swing, the dogs will come over and need a pat. You can SEE the friggin ticks walking around on their fur, the only dead ones are the ones that are attached. And this is only May for cripes sake. Doesn't look to be a real comfortable summer. Gonna be feeling and scratching and picking. Gross. Yuck. Anyone else in the country and noticing ticks are pretty bad this year? I am in Kentucky. Judy |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
I have 6 dogs, 4 of em small, so I get the St. Bernard size and divide it up for all
of em. Ingrid "Judy and Dave G" wrote: Yep, Frontline all the way. We have 3 dogs, well 4 up until last week. All the dogs are over the 44 lbs size so the Frontline is the medium size and expensive. I get it online much cheaper than at the vet! ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ List Manager: Puregold Goldfish List http://puregold.aquaria.net/ www.drsolo.com Solve the problem, dont waste energy finding who's to blame ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Unfortunately, I receive no money, gifts, discounts or other compensation for all the damn work I do, nor for any of the endorsements or recommendations I make. |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
Kathy wrote:
Guinea fowl are wonderful, we used them all the time for our garden, yard and around our boarding kennel. Never had a trace of a tick and besides they aerate the garden for you to some extent. We lived on 40 acres with about 10 of it being thick trees, the kennel was beside the wooded area and after turning loose the guinea's we had no problems with ticks or fleas anywhere. Kathy "lwr" wrote in message ... "Guinea hens are known to have a voracious appetite for ticks, so some folks in tick infested areas buy them for that purpose. Susan" AND "Go 5 mile out of town and you see more and more guinea fowl which on a restricted diet can reduce tick populations by about 80%" Hi Folks - Yes. Get some guineas! Both these quotes are true I'd say - as we've had between 6 - 24 guineas almost constantly running loose (they over winter and roost in a good sized chicken house) for over two dozen years here on my Ozark beef farm and believe me the ticks have been NOTICEABLY reduced in number! This is apparently how it works - 1/ guinea walks by the tick on the leaf - the tick jumps onto the guinea - 2/ guinea preens itself regularly - finds tick - 3/ eats tick. Aslo fattened ticks collecting where animals often sleep are a thick juicy snack for a guinea - also of cardinals I might add. So - over a period of years this repetitive guinea process severely eats into the tick population (unless God forgid - rabbits are ever allowed free birthing rights in rampant blackberry patches by certain overly sensitive types who love 'cute' more than good sense.) Now lo and behold - we are seldom adversely affected by excessive ticks anywhere near our house - although one or two will appear occasionally no matter what it seems. Guineas are however often noisy - and sometimes here they can get shot dead if they overly indulge in any monotony of racket - causing the evolution of quieter and quieter farm guneas - one would hope. G Actually when they 'pair off' (married???) they can become quite settled and peaceful - making a pleasant kind of gentle peeping sound as they walk by ever scanning the grass for bugs. We like the natural 'pearl' kind - like you see on Natiuonal Geographic shows about Africa - I wouldn't want a weird purple or mauve or white one on the place - (unless G they were also quieter). - Wes/MO Hi Kathy - Nice to know that you had good luck with guineas vs. those evil horrible ticks too. It is apparently easier for those of us who have room to allow them to roam freely about - or at least have friendly equally appreciative neighbors. - Wes/MO |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
Guineas, and lots of them!
Where I moved to in Ohio, the ticks were so thick that you couldn't go outside for long without getting one or three, the I bought seven guineas and you wouldn't believe the difference! The guineas (up to 21 now) patrol the whole neighborhood and eat every tick they can find (except deer ticks, I guess they're hard for the Guineas to see) plus Mexican Bean Beetles, Colorado Potatoes Bugs, and many other bugs and are cleaner than ducks! Another perk is they roost in the trees at the edge of the yard and alert me at night if anything comes into the yard! Only thing I wish was that their young tolerated the dampness better so they'd propagate the whole county! have a good one, Homer |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
Judy and Dave G wrote:
"mt2" wrote in message ... Guinea hens love to eat ticks. Chickens do too. Yes a great idea. But our dogs seem to favor the taste of fresh poultry. I wish there was a way to get them to not eat the little guys. We have a beekeeper in our club who has been trying to get us to keep chickens for years. He says the dogs won't eat many. Yuck. (He is also the one that thinks the miniature ponies are just the right size for the freezer. I won't even go there.) Judy "Judy and Dave G" wrote in message ... Hello all. Good lord. I have seen more ticks so far this year than I have ever seen before. We moved to this farm 10 years ago. Took me a couple years to be able to pick a tick off and kill it. Still can't touch those darn swelled up, grayish green ones. Dave's gotta get them. Our farm is about 60 acres, on a hillside, from the creek at the bottom to the ridge at the top. I hate snakes and ticks. I read somewhere, sometime that if you mow areas close to your home that snakes and ticks shouldn't be a problem. Well, I get a bit carried away. I mow about 3 acres in the bottoms, about an acre around the house, then a 30 foot path up to the top of the hill with about an acre by the bees, an acre at the first leveling, and about 3 acres in the top field by the pond. So you can pretty much walk everywhere that is comfortable (some of the hillside is really a bit too steep for comfort) and not be close to high grass. Even at the middle of the path, the higher grass is 15 feet away. Now, when I am mowing, I am fair game to the ticks. Because I am sitting on the lawn tractor and brushing right past all the weeds, berries and ivy and ducking under the trees. But, if I walk out the front door, down the walk, onto the gravel drive, down to the road for the mail, (about 300 feet) and back up to the house: I have at least 3, count em, 3 friggin ticks on me. Geez. We use flea and tick drops on the dogs. We have 3 dogs now. Apparently the drops don't deter the ticks from getting on the dogs. If you sit on the porch and swing, the dogs will come over and need a pat. You can SEE the friggin ticks walking around on their fur, the only dead ones are the ones that are attached. And this is only May for cripes sake. Doesn't look to be a real comfortable summer. Gonna be feeling and scratching and picking. Gross. Yuck. Anyone else in the country and noticing ticks are pretty bad this year? I am in Kentucky. Judy Hi Again Judy - As to preventing dogs from eating your poultry - if you've got the desire - it takes about a good 30 minutes with your dog on a leash (for you to tug on) and quite a few firm disapproving "NO NO's - properly spoken to your temporarily lunging but securely restrained dog while the both of you are walking amongst your poultry - then you can easily do it. The dog just hates getting the "No No's! - however - perhaps after the initial training episode - if the dog still shows continued interest (ears perk up while eyes steadily focus in a menacingly way on said fowl - or especially if you should by chance have a somewhat more single minded dog like a Chow) - you might want to keep the dog tied for an additional period or until you can repeat this training session one more time before releasing and testing said dog - always at this point with watchful supervision - perhaps a few more 'no no's' if dog adversely shows ANY - even momentary - 'interest' - OR until you are fully assured that the dog has indeed been 'retrained.' This procedure should train your dog NOT to chase your fowl - even when you're not around. Your good dog should then be able to doze while guineas and chickens are happily foraging nearby - and even protect them from wild predators. Our dogs (blue and red heelers) even chase after hawks. This has been my experience getting young and even occasionally older dogs to coexist peacefully with all our free ranging poultry here on our place for many years. - Wes/MO |
Ticks, Ticks and more Ticks
All we use is Frontline. Easy on the dogs skin if they are allergic to
something. Frontline is not a heartworm med. We use Interceptor (Heartworm)and Frontline (Flea and Tick). No problems and my dogs and I are in the woods everyday for a couple of hours. No tick this year yet and my dogs are tick magnets. Marty Judy and Dave G wrote: "madgardener" wrote in message .. . If you're using Frontline tick drops it absolutely KILLS the ticks. I don't use Advantage. Doesn't work. madgardener who hasn't had ticks on Rose or her felines since using Frontline drops that comes in a three pack. Yep, Frontline all the way. We have 3 dogs, well 4 up until last week. All the dogs are over the 44 lbs size so the Frontline is the medium size and expensive. I get it online much cheaper than at the vet! Judy |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 03:38 PM. |
|
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
GardenBanter