T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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231.1 | | RINGO::WHEELER | | Mon Apr 14 1986 14:06 | 8 |
|
Last time I bought 'flea collars' my vet cut them off and threw
them away, saying they aren't worth buying. Try using a good
spray instead of wasteing your money on 'flea' collars
/robin
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231.2 | Collars have their place. | DSSDEV::WALSH | Chris Walsh | Mon Apr 14 1986 15:15 | 22 |
| Your vet sounds kinda arrogant to me. I'll bet your vet wants to administer
the sprays, or sells you a nice expensive 'veterinary only' brand, and drives
a Rolls Royce.
Flea collars have been very effective with my cats. You just have to be aware
that any kind of pesticide can lose it's effectiveness against a particular
pest population, and try different collars if one is not effective.
Our vets sell the 'industrial strength' brand, plus we've also used several
kinds of commercial collars. We've alternated between brands, and have had no
serious problems.
Sprays and powders work well, but they are a pain. I personally don't like
fighting with my cats, and they don't object nearly as much to getting a
collar as they do to a flea bath or spraying. Plus you have to use a spray or
powder much more often.
I'd rather send my time playing with my cats or petting them, instead of
wrapping them in a towel, subjecting them to a tremendous indignity, and
having them run from me for the next day or so...
- Chris
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231.3 | Get Carbomate collars -- not Phosphate! | PROSE::LAWLER | | Mon Apr 14 1986 17:46 | 20 |
| I agree with you, Chris -- I can't believe any vet would say that flea
collars are "useless!" They certainly do help and are MUCH
preferable to at-home sprays and powders (which have their own dangers due
to inhalation of the microscopic particles those products contain).
My vet did tell me, however, when I took my Bo in as a kitten 5 years ago, to
MAKE SURE the collars contained "CARBOMATE," not the "phosphate" that many of
the more commercial kinds (i.e., Hartz, Sargent's, etc.) of collars contain.
There are two brands which contain this preferred "carbomate" chemical: ZODIAC
(usually available through vets, as well as many -- but not all --
"better" pet supply stores) and the Doktor Pet Center brand, available of
course at Doktor Pet Center.
My Bo wore these kinds of collars all his life -- they are kind of milky color,
coated with a powder-like substance -- and he NEVER had any problems either
with fleas or with allergy to the chemical. I also used to write his name,
address and phone on each new one -- about twice a year, although some cats
would need more frequent changes. The carbomate collars are a little (but not
much!) more expensive than the kind you can buy at any old supermarket, but
are well worth it, in both effectiveness and health for your cat.
|
231.4 | The attitude may be regional | RAVEN1::HEFFELFINGER | Tracey Heffelfinger | Tue Apr 15 1986 12:26 | 30 |
| RE: .2 and .3
Yeah, and I'll bet you live in the north too. Don't make
assumptions about vets' arrogance until you've lived with southern
parasites for a while.
While I've never had a vet rip off a collar, I've never had one
reccomend one either. I worked for a vet in Columbia, S.C. for
2 years when I was growing up. None of the 5 vets that I worked
with closely (either working for or taking animals to) reccomend
collars. My previous vet reccomended Adam's flea spray. I can get that
at other places than his office. For instance, at the animal shelter.
(I volunteered there for a while.) They use adam's spray. It worked
very well considering the horrendous situation with fleas there.
(new invasions with every animal, you know.)
I'll have to dig up my article on flea collars and why they
think they work (they don't know) and why they are not of help in
some areas of the country.
I've lived in the north and I've lived in South Carolina for
a long time. You guys just don't understand the parasite situation
in a place where the winters do not get cold enough to kill off
the existing popuplation in winter and the summers are hot and humid
just like the litter buggers want.
(The reason for this regional outbreak, is because I think Robin
is from Atlanta which would explain her vet's outlook. If I'm
remembering wrong, Oh, well. Maybe there's another reason for his
dislike...)
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231.5 | | AVANTI::WHEELER | | Tue Apr 15 1986 13:00 | 10 |
|
Nope, I'm from central massachusetts... My vet gave me a pump spray
bottle of flea spray, and a aresol can of house spary... He is
definatatly against collars though (my cats are both indoors only)
I remember him saying with the sprays you catch the 'strays' that
are in the carpeting, furniture, etc...
/robin - marlboro, mass
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231.6 | | SCOTCH::TAMIR | | Tue Apr 15 1986 14:23 | 14 |
| My vet gave me a good idea when I waged my first battle with fleas
and flea control...he told me to get some flea collars (cheap ones,
even) and cut them into 2-3 inch pieces and tuck them into the
sofa and chairs where H. B. Farnsworth liked taking his naps. That
really did the trick to help control the flea problem without spraying
my furniture and risking staining it.
I used a powder on Honey for localized flea control and I don't
think I've ever seen him so angry (except the time I had to give
him Pepto-Bismol after he ate a spider plant). He was none to pleased!
But I wasn't too pleased about the fleas, either!
Mary
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231.7 | Poor kitty looks MUCH better today | KATIE::RICHARDSON | | Tue Apr 15 1986 18:03 | 16 |
| JFCL's neck looks MUCH better, so I'm not going to disturb her by
taking her to the vet, and I will see if I can get one of the other
varieties of flea collars that she has worn in the past with no
troubles. The only thing my vet ever said about my cats' collars
was that the ones that leave a chemical in the bloodstream (the
brown Hartz ones, for one kind) do not repel fleas but just kill
ones that bite the cat, and that many cats are allergic to that
kind of collar. Both of my cats wore that kind for a while a few
years ago with no troubles. So, I dunno. I don't want to subject
them to baths (I had enough trouble washing the chemicals off of
the 'FCL the other night - my cats do not like water at all, unless
they are very hot in the summer and some nice human with wet hands
rubs water into their backs). I also don't want to spray stuff
all over the place - I'd probably turn out to be allergic to it
myself, given how many things I have trouble with. There aren't
any fleas inside my house.
|
231.8 | True - a Yankee born and bred | DSSDEV::WALSH | Chris Walsh | Tue Apr 15 1986 18:12 | 23 |
| RE: < Note 231.4 by RAVEN1::HEFFELFINGER "Tracey Heffelfinger" >
Yep - lived in Ohio and now Massachusetts all my life. That's not to say that
I don't understand the problem. I've quite a few college friends who have
moved south - and visiting them in summer is tantamount to volunteering to be
the snack of the week.
Granted, in such areas of the country, flea collars are not enough. But
useless? Not unless the pests have developed an immunity, or they live
exclusively on the tip of the cat's tail. (Many supermarket brands have
used the same ingredients for so long, they ARE ineffective. Needless
to say, if you find fleas on your cat despite a collar, get a different
collar.)
All I can think is that the vet in question is a recent import, or rich. When
we first got the Empress Star, she brought an infestation I didn't believe.
(We took her because the people who owned her obviously didn't know how to
take care of kittens.) Our feet and ankles suffered quite a bit until Star
got old enough to put a collar on. By this time, the house was crawling.
Star got a bath, a dose of flea powder, a flea collar and the house was
bugbombed twice, two weeks apart. No more problem since - two years of flea
control by collar alone.
|
231.9 | Is anybody else itching as they're reading this topic? | PROSE::LAWLER | | Tue Apr 15 1986 19:21 | 14 |
| RE: .4
Yes, Tracey, you are right -- fleas on both cats and dogs are MUCH more of a
problem in the South. I have some older friends who live in Florida most of
the winter and their cats have an incredibly horrendous time with fleas -- when
they leave their condo every year in April, they have to set off two or three
bugbombs, because the fleas would have literally moved the furniture around
by the time they return in the fall! (Although back home in Washington DC,
they just have "normal" flea problems.) I'm originally from Virginia myself,
and I remember that fleas on animals are much worse there, too. (Although now
that I live in New Hampshire, I've never seen worse mosquitoes -- not to mention
the black flies!) So, thanks for reminding us that this notesfile covers a LOT
of territory!
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231.10 | Allergic reaction to flea spray? | MCIS5::CORMIER | | Mon Nov 11 1991 12:54 | 23 |
| Not exactly a flea "collar" reaction, but there are too many notes of
fleas and allergies to choose from! Anyway, we've been having a slight
problem with fleas since Spike the wonder cat has come to live with us
("us" includes two long-haired dogs). One of my dogs has SEVERE
flea-bite dermatitis, to the point of taking prednisone and benadryl,
so I'm meticulous about flea control. I decided hand-picking was not
controlling it, and decided to spray all three animals. The dogs were
no problem, the cat was FURIOUS at having been sprayed, but he
tolerated it. 2 minutes later, Spike came dashing out to me, meowing,
and was foaming at the mouth! I don't mean a few bubbles, I mean
"rivers" of foam, dripping all over his chin and the floor. I grabbed
him and immediately tossed him into the tub to rinse him off. I can't
tell if this was a "fur-lick" reaction, or an allergic reaction to the
product (Zodiac dog and cat pump spray). Anybody else ever have a cat
react like this to a substance? Once I was sure he was OK (perfectly
fine after a bath), I had to laugh. I thought Spike was mad at the flea
spray routine, but that was NOTHING compared to his reaction to a bath!
Spike was a stray, for about 2 years wandering around our neighborhood,
so he was quite surprised by all this activity involving water. He was
so mad at me for the rest of the night, sneering at me and leaving the
room when I entered. I'm used to dogs, so I found his "attitude" quite
comical. He didn't appreciate me laughing at him, either : )
Sarah
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231.11 | Flea topics are as plentiful as fleas :'D | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Mon Nov 11 1991 14:50 | 14 |
| I have had a reaction in some of my cats to a flea dip for cats. They
sometimes foamed at the mouth, but more likely were hyperactive and
hyperanxious. I did the same thing that you did, toss them into the
tub and washed it all off. They were fine after they were bathed and
free of the stuff.
It could have been a reaction from licking the stuff. Did you catch
him licking it? My cats started reacting before they ever had a chance
to lick it off. I would be careful of using flea products on Spike
again. The cats of mine that had the reactions appear to be more
sensitive to other products as well. Now I use the Borax and a flea
comb and that works for all of them.
Jo
|
231.12 | Didn't see him licking | MCIS5::CORMIER | | Mon Nov 11 1991 14:57 | 13 |
| Jo,
I have a dog who is hypersensitive to flea products, so I guess I'll
forget them all. Luckily it is snowing right now, so I hope all our
flea problems are over for this season. The cat and the dogs are
flea-free (after our romp in the tub I kept them all in the house
except for pee-breaks for the dogs). I didn't see him licking, but
then he was so angry that he ran and hid under the bed, until he
noticed something was wrong and came to get me! Funny how he knew
enough to let me know something was wrong, even though he was upset.
I've tried a product with a natural flea-killing additive d-Limonene for
the sensitive dog, but that didn't have residual effects, just killed
the fleas on the dog. I think it's now time to read the "giving a
bath" notes to get both dogs and cat completely clean. Wish me luck!
|
231.13 | he probably absorbed it | WR2FOR::CORDESBRO_JO | set home/cat_max=infinity | Mon Nov 11 1991 16:37 | 26 |
| The flea dip that I used that a couple of my cats reacted to was the
Hill's Citrus Dip with d-limonene. Only two of my cats over the years
have had any reaction and both reversed when the dip was washed off. I
still recommend that dip since it is not a pesticide in the usual sense
and it does work. I just don't use it on those two cats anymore.
Actually, I haven't used it in about 2 years now. Funny, but since I
have had my dog I have had less of a flea problem. Mostly because I
knew that having a dog *could* make things worse so I took a proactive
approach to the flea problem. Hit them before they could hit me. When
you have a houseful of indoor cats or cattery like I do, the last thing
you want to have to deal with is fleas. We keep our yard sprayed so
that when Annie goes out to go to the bathroom she doesn't bring them
back in with her. Also, most of my cats are white in color and we can
notice the fleas and flea dirt right away, before we have a total
infestation.
Also keep in mind that cats absorb things through their skin. That is
why most dog flea products aren't safe for cats. That is probably what
happened with your cat. The flea spray was absorbed through his skin
and he reacted to it. What a smart cat he was to let you know that he
was having a problem.
Jo
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231.14 | Approach dips with some caution | RLAV::BARRETT | Is it safe? | Mon Nov 11 1991 21:47 | 19 |
| One of my owners, Smokey, was dipped for fleas earlier this year
at the vet, and actually started going bald! It was a bit scary,
wondering if it was ever going to stop. It did finally, but not
before she had some bald spots. The vet was surprised - said he
had never dipped cats before he found this particular dip due to
their sensitivity, and he'd never seen this kind of reaction.
Smokey has used the Zodiac flea collars, without reaction, but my
vet doesn't think much of flea collars either - he recommends
Adams spray, which I use sparingly on Smokey and my other two with
no problems (except they hate me for it).
I comb Spike and Trouble regularly, but Smokey will not let me
come near her with the comb or brush (or to clip her nails,
meaning that all these activities are dangerous...).
Anyway, beware the dips...
Sue B + Smokey, Spike and Trouble...
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231.15 | | SANFAN::BALZERMA | | Tue Nov 12 1991 13:24 | 7 |
|
Jo, the dip you mentioned was what Carol (an Exotic breeder) used on
her kids. Four of them had severe reactions to it. She called the
company and they told her that Persians and Persian crosses seem to be
extremely sensitive to it.
|