Heaven Sent Natural Pet Care Products

Subscribe for
Club Discounts

Follow us on Twitter Check us out on Facebook
Check out our Blog Subcribe to our Email Newsletter - Discounts!

repellents « Heaven Sent Natural Pet Products Blog

March 2, 2010

All About Fleas

Filed under: Flea Control — Tags: , , — Sam @ 9:55 pm

Here’s some interesting information about fleas. Some you may know, some you may not.

Public Enemy #1?

Public Enemy #1?

  • Fleas pass through a complete life cycle of four stages.
    1. Egg (50% of the population)
    2. Larvae (30% of the population)
    3. Pupae (15% of the population)
    4. Adults (5% of the population)

    So only 5% of fleas actually bite!

  • Completion of the life cycle from egg to adult varies from two weeks to eight months
  • Normally the female flea lays about 15 to 20 eggs per day up to 600 in a lifetime.
  • Usual hosts for fleas are dogs, cats, rats, rabbits, mice, squirrels, chipmunks, raccoons, opossums, foxes, chickens, and humans.
  • Eggs loosely laid in the hair or fur, drop out where the pet rests, sleeps or nests (rugs, carpets, upholstered furniture, cat or dog boxes, kennels, sand boxes, etc.)
  • Eggs hatch in two days to two weeks into larvae found indoors in floor cracks & crevices, along baseboards, under rug edges and in furniture or beds.
  • Sand and gravel are very suitable for flea development which is the reason fleas are erroneously called “sand fleas.”
  • Larvae are blind, avoid light, pass through three larval stages and take a week to several months to develop.
  • Their food consists of digested blood from adult flea feces, dead skin, hair, feathers, and other organic debris. (Larvae do not suck blood.)
  • Pupa mature to adulthood within a silken cocoon woven by the larva to which pet hair, carpet fiber, dust, grass cuttings, and other debris adheres.
  • In about five to fourteen days, adult fleas can emerge or may remain resting in the cocoon until the detection of vibration (pet and people movement), pressure (host animal lying down on them), heat, noise, or carbon dioxide (meaning a potential blood source is near).
  • Most fleas survive the winter in the larval or pupa stage and grow best during warm, moist winters and spring.
  • Adult fleas cannot survive or lay eggs without a blood meal, but may hibernate from two months to one year without feeding.

    One big surprise people get is when they return from vacation and they find themselves with a major flea problem in the house. There is often a desperate need for flea control after a family has returned from a long vacation. The house has been empty with no cat or dog around for fleas to feed on. When the family and pets are gone, flea eggs hatch and larvae pupate. The adult fleas fully developed inside the pupa cocoon remains in a kind of “limbo” for a long time until a blood source is near. The family returning from vacation is immediately attacked by waiting hungry hordes of fleas. (In just 30 days, 10 female fleas under ideal conditions can multiply to over a quarter million different life stages.)

  • Completely developed adult fleas can live for several months without eating, as long as they do not emerge from their cocoons.
  • Newly emerged adult fleas live only about one week if a blood meal is not obtained.
  • Optimum temperatures for the flea’s life cycle are 70°F to 85°F and optimum humidity is 70 percent.

For 100% flea control, we recommend a comprehensive 3-step program to completely eliminate fleas. We offer all-natural flea control products for eliminating fleas from your lawn, eliminating fleas from your carpet, and of course eliminating fleas from your pet(s). This approach is often the only way to completely rid your house of fleas.

July 30, 2009

Shoo Fly! Natural Bug Repellents

Filed under: repellents — Tags: , — Sam @ 10:02 pm

You don’t need poisons to deal with bugs.

Start by making yourself an unappealing target.

Making human flesh unappetizing to mosquitoes, ticks, flies, and fleas is an age-old preoccupation.  The earliest insect repellents included smoke, mud, and various plant substances.  Our contemporary contribution is DEET (N, N-diethyl-meta-toluamide), a powerful insecticide found in over 400 repellents.  DEET can peel paint, damage rayon and spandex, and melt plastic.  Up to 56 percent of DEET applied to the skin enters the bloodstream, and reactions to it include skin rashes, lethargy, muscle spasms, nausea, and irritability.  An extreme reaction can cause seizures and even death.  So it’s hardly worth using DEET to deter insects unless you’re someplace with high rates of insect-borne disease or you experience severe allergic reactions to bites and stings.

There are natural alternatives to DEET.  Our Nature’s Way Insect Spray, made primarily from natural oils, can protect you in less threatening circumstances.  Although  there is no natural repellent as effective as DEET, natural repellents do help ward off mosquitoes, black flies, gnats, and fleas, and they may provide some protection against ticks.
Ticks, the carriers of Lyme disease, are among the most worrisome pests.  If you are traveling in an area known for Lyme disease (according to the Centers for Disease Control, this includes the Atlantic states and Northern California), contact the American Lyme Disease Foundation at (800) 876-5963 for preventive advice.

See also: ABC News – The Dangers of Lyme Disease






   
 
Heaven Sent Natural Pet Products