T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3813.1 | | NRADM::ROBINSON | did i tell you this already??? | Mon Jul 23 1990 09:26 | 4 |
|
Yes, if your cat walked through it, and has the oil on
her fur, you can get it from touching her...
|
3813.2 | It's common... | MCIS5::MCDONOUGH | | Mon Jul 23 1990 09:37 | 8 |
| You most certainly can..in fact, a lady who works in my office has a
severe case currently that she got from her cat.. They can brush
against the plant (and poison oak and poison sumac as well..) and carry
the substance that causes it for MILES in their fur... The stuff that
causes the blistering is called "Urushiol" (probably spelled wrong...)
and an extremely small amount will cause the blistering...
JMcD
|
3813.3 | Diffenately | IAMOK::BAXTER | | Mon Jul 23 1990 10:22 | 5 |
| I get it all the time from the dog and the horse. The oil sits on the
top of the fur and when you go and pet them it gets on your hands. Or
in my cats case around my ankles.
db
|
3813.4 | | ASABET::F_SPINNEY | | Mon Jul 23 1990 10:30 | 3 |
| YUP! I got it from the puppy:-((
|
3813.5 | Fingers on my left hand are blistered from just walking by! | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Mon Jul 23 1990 13:57 | 4 |
| If you are sensitive enough, you get even get ivy poisoning by walking
by it!
Deb
|
3813.6 | Yes, I get it every year!!!!!!! | WFOV11::HILLS | | Mon Jul 23 1990 16:08 | 12 |
| Since I moved to Russell three years ago, I have gotten poison
ivy every year. Deb is right. You can get poison ivy just by walking
by it on a hot day. The poison ivy is in my backyard and the kitties
play up in the area it is in. And when they come into the house
and brush up against me I get it.
I have been hospitalized twice now for inflamed poison ivy and
have been covered with it all over. There is nothing you can do
really but let it run it's course for ten days. I have had everything
my doctor and hospital have prescribed. And I just had to wait,
until the next time my fur faces get into the poison ivy.
Sincerely,
Denise
|
3813.7 | I've been fertilizing *what*!!!!!!! | FRAGLE::PELUSO | PAINTS; color your corral | Mon Jul 23 1990 16:28 | 14 |
| re:.6
If you have it in your back yard, why don't you get rid of it??
I got it from gardening in march/april. There was no sign of
it at that time, but apparantly there was enough stuff in the soil
to affect me (for 3-4 months!). I got rid of it by spraying
Round-Up on it. It can harm people and animals when wet, but when
it dries.....it kills the plants good! I also got 3 tomatoe plants
and a patch of grass....bt they could be replaced. I also believe
it is biodegradable, and safe for the enviroment.....but I'm not
too sure. I am generally very conscious of the enviroment and
animals.....but if I ever have to go through what I went through
again....... ;*)
|
3813.8 | You miss the point about SEVERE sensitivity! | VAXWRK::SKALTSIS | Deb | Mon Jul 23 1990 17:16 | 13 |
|
>If you have it in your back yard, why don't you get rid of it??
If you are severely sensitive to it, you can get a SEVERE CASE of ivy
poisoning just getting close enough to it to spray stuff on to it!
(This is the voice of experience!) And even then, most sprays don't
work; the stuff that used to be used for it is now illegal to use.
I've contacted several lawn services and they all tell me the only real
way to get rid of it is to dig the lawn up (read big bucks). And none
of them wanted the job. And neither did the landscapers that I called.
Deb (who got her most current case walking down the MRO access road to
watch a friend play softball)
|
3813.9 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Tue Jul 24 1990 08:57 | 3 |
| And whatever you do, Don't burn it!!!!! You can get it really
bad from the smoke.
Nancy DC
|
3813.10 | I have tried everything to get rid of it. | WFOV12::HILLS | | Tue Jul 24 1990 13:44 | 14 |
| In my note I expressed that I have poison ivy in my backyard. I
have sprayed all kinds of things to get rid of the poison ivy, and
some of the sprays work, but I live in the country and there is
so much poison ivy that you couldn't even touch all of it. I have
a bank that goes up to a road and it is loaded. You couldn't possibly
get rid of all the poison ivy.
Poison ivy is a weed that spreads and spreads. My neighbor has
poison ivy in her yard and I have even sprayed her yard with sprays
to get rid of it. So my kitties wouldn't go into her yard and bring
it home.
If you try to burn poison ivy. A person can die from it. If the
smoke is inhaled the poison ivy will go inside your throat, lungs,
mouth, tongue, etc. And it blisters inside your whole system.
Denise
|
3813.11 | The "Natural" cure...REAL "Natural"!! | MCIS5::MCDONOUGH | | Tue Jul 24 1990 13:52 | 15 |
| Here's the best way in the WORLD of getting rid of Poison Ivy, but
it's only good for those of you who have the facilities and love most
all animals....
Get a Goat!! Yup!! Goats are immune to the stuff, but more than that,
they are also addicted to it. They'll not only eat it, they love it so
much they;'ll eat it down below the surface of the ground. including
the roots. What's even more curious, if the Goat is a milking goat, you
can still use the milk since the stuff does NOT get into the milk...
'Course you have to have some land and a place to keep the little
dickens if you want to get a Goat...
John McD
|
3813.12 | | SAGE::MITCHELL_V | | Wed Jul 25 1990 14:27 | 7 |
|
I am getting over a case of poison ivy. I am sure I contacted it
through my cat. I am using this cream which seems to be drying the
it up. I heard that every time you contact poison ivy the rashes
become more severe. I am very careful now about washing my hands after
touching the cat.
|
3813.13 | can cats get it? | COOKIE::SIMON | | Mon Jul 30 1990 17:40 | 13 |
| a timely topic...I think I came down with a case of poison ivy last
week before heading to DECWorld, and thought I got it chasing one of my
cats through the bushes by a creek. It is possible, from reading these
notes, that I caught it from him after I found him and picked him up.
My initial concern was (and I guess still is) - can cats get poison ivy
blisters, etc. from coming in contact with the plant? Since I wasn't
there last week I wasn't able to keep him under observation, but my
girlfriend said that neither he nor any of the other cats had any
blistering. I want to make sure that none of the cats comes down with
a case of it and goes ballistic with scratching, etc.
Thanks for any info.
|
3813.14 | Digression - personal experience with goats | GR8FUL::WHITE | Bring me my pistol & 3 rounds o'ball... | Wed Aug 08 1990 14:42 | 19 |
|
Re: <<< Note 3813.11 by MCIS5::MCDONOUGH >>>
> Get a Goat!! Yup!! Goats are immune to the stuff, but more than that,
> they are also addicted to it. They'll not only eat it, they love it so
> much they;'ll eat it down below the surface of the ground. including
> the roots. What's even more curious, if the Goat is a milking goat, you
> can still use the milk since the stuff does NOT get into the milk...
It is my understanding that poison ivy induces an allergic reaction and
that goats don't react. My goat(s) eat poison ivy but they certainly
aren't "addicted" to it. They would much rather eat a tasty oak leaf or
rose bush any day.
It is also my understanding that drinking the milk of a goat that
regularly eats poison ivy passes on some immunity...
Bob
|
3813.15 | | CRUISE::NDC | Putiput Scottish Folds - DTN: 297-2313 | Thu Aug 09 1990 09:15 | 1 |
| I LOVE goats! Especially the pigmy ones. They're so affectionate :-)
|