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Farewell To Fleas
Article By
Frances Gavin - Canine Natural Cures
Are
you worried about the effects of chemicals on your dog? Why not
make your own safe, non toxic flea repellents?
CITRUS REPELLENT: Cut a lemon into quarters and place in
a pint jug. Cover the lemon with boiling water and let it steep
overnight. Next day you have a flea repellent that you can use in
a spray bottle. Spray all over your dog remembering especially behind
the ears and around the head generally (careful of eyes), around
the base of the tail (once again keep away from delicate bits) and
under your dog's 'armpits'.
AROMATHERAPY
REPELLENT: Using 10 ml. of sweet almond oil as your base, add
10 drops of lavender and 5 drops of cedarwood. Shake well and use
1 or 2 drops spread over the skin at least twice a week to keep
the fleas away.
A flea collar can be made by rubbing a few drops of one of the following
into an ordinary webbing or rope collar or even a doggy bandanna:
eucalyptus oil, Tea Tree Oil, citronella, lavender or geranium.
Don't forget to do this weekly.
YOUR
HOME: Fleas spend most of their time in your furnishings and
only hop onto your dog or you for their next meal. Make sure you
wash your dog's bedding regularly because no flea ever survived
a hot wash cycle. If you add eucalyptus oil to the final rinse it
will also kill 99% of house dust mites according to research from
the University of Sydney, Australia.
Vacuum your home very thoroughly and sprinkle a fine layer of ordinary
table salt over your upholstery and carpets and leave overnight
before vacuuming again to evict your unwelcome guests safely but
don't forget to empty your vacuum bag.
BATHING:
A badly infested dog really needs to be bathed so use your favorite
dog shampoo. Rinse the dog off very thoroughly and in the final
rinse add a couple of drops of Tea Tree Oil or Lavender oil. An
alternative is to make your own herbal flea dip which will also
work on ticks. Steep two cups of fresh rosemary in two pints of
boiling water for 30 minutes. Strain the liquid, discard the leaves
and make it up to one gallon ( 8 pints) with warm water. Pour this
mixture over the dog until it's saturated. Do not rinse off and
allow the dog to dry naturally so this is a remedy to use on hot
summer days.
INTERNAL
FLEA REPELLENTS: Garlic may not be your favorite cologne and
it's not the flea's favorite smell either. When your dog eats garlic,
the smell is excreted through the dog's skin making your dog less
likely to be the flea's next meal. In case you think you might need
to give your dog a breath freshener along with the garlic, my dogs,
Mack and Josh, eat a garlic clove every day and I don't find their
breath smells from it at all.
Brewer's yeast tablets will also help to make your dog less attractive
to fleas because once again the smell is excreted through the skin.
Adding a dessertspoon of apple cider vinegar to the water bowl will
make the skin more acidic and unpleasant to fleas and ticks. If
your dogs don't fancy apple cider vinegar in the water bowl, dilute
it 50/50 with water and use in a spray bottle instead of the citrus
repellent.
Article by Frances Gavin - Canine Natural Cures
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