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carnation 09-25-2012 08:27 AM

Flea Treatments
 
I'd like to know what y'all are using to treat fleas. I know it's been a bad year for them because of the past mild winter but this is insane! We were doing okay until our son brought his dog, who was untreated, for a visit from south Georgia.

Since then--it's been awful. We have used Advantix, Advantage, and Frontline and even used them twice monthly at the vet's advice. We've had the house and yard treated several times. No luck.

Has anyone used that new pill? Or anything that worked?

summer_gphib 09-25-2012 08:47 AM

We use comfortis, the pill, and love, love, love it! We've been using it for about 3 or 4 years, and have not had a flea since. At one point we were having to do a rotation every two weeks of the topical treatments, switching them out constantly, and we still had fleas. We did a single dose of capstar, which kills all fleas within thirty minutes and lasts for only 24 hours, then we started the comfortis. We haven't had a flea since.

We've thought of switching to trifexis, which is a comfortis/heartworm combined pill. But for right now, we give both separately, and it seems to work. (We also don't give comfortis the same day as heartgard. I'm just old school on that. )

adpiucf 09-25-2012 09:18 AM

Comfortis is the only thing that has consistently worked for me. My dog has been on it for 5 years, and we haven't had a flea problem since. Prior, I had mixed success with Advantix, Revolution, etc.

SWTXBelle 09-25-2012 09:49 AM

I am Team Comfortis, too. Great stuff.

shirley1929 09-25-2012 12:16 PM

Yep! Comfortis as well here. We had a bad situation where were starting to get fleas, ran the dog to the vet to get new meds and dipped (while the house was being treated) and the vet only gave us TICK medicine. We didn't find this out until a month later when the cycle started over again and we couldn't figure out why. I was the crazy crying lady in the vet's office asking "WHY, WHY, WHY!?!?"

They put us on Comfortis (I made them give it to me free the first go-round because they screwed up) and we haven't looked back!

FSUZeta 09-25-2012 12:30 PM

Dog and both cats are on Revolution, which takes care of fleas,ticks, and heartworm, and it works well for them, although, I feel now like I should check out comfortis.

Lovethesand 09-25-2012 12:34 PM

Team Comfortis. I have a mini schnauzer who has skin issues to begin with. The fleas only make it worse. We've tried everything and comfortis is quick, non-messy, and works. I found a place online that ships from the UK (I had no idea) and it's 6 pills for $59.00

sigmadiva 09-25-2012 12:54 PM

When it comes to treating fleas, you have to do a three step attack.

1. Treat the dog. I have been using Frontline and it works well for me. I know about the new pill, but I have not used it yet. I would like to switch to it when I run out of Frontline.

2. Treat your living spaces, especially rooms with rugs and carpets. Like the commercial says, fleas really do love to live in your carpet. I have been using a product called Flea Stoppers. Basically its powdered boric acid. You sprinkle it into your carpets like carpet powder, sweep it in, and leave it there for a few days.

3. Treat your yard. There are a few products by Scotts and other companies that you can buy from Home Depot or Lowes. They are in the pesticide aisle.


I highly recommend doing all three at the same time.

I speak from personal experience.....:o

shirley1929 09-25-2012 01:03 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sigmadiva (Post 2180999)
When it comes to treating fleas, you have to do a three step attack.

1. Treat the dog. I have been using Frontline and it works well for me. I know about the new pill, but I have not used it yet. I would like to switch to it when I run out of Frontline.

2. Treat your living spaces, especially rooms with rugs and carpets. Like the commercial says, fleas really do love to live in your carpet. I have been using a product called Flea Stoppers. Basically its powdered boric acid. You sprinkle it into your carpets like carpet powder, sweep it in, and leave it there for a few days.

3. Treat your yard. There are a few products by Scotts and other companies that you can buy from Home Depot or Lowes. They are in the pesticide aisle.


I highly recommend doing all three at the same time.

I speak from personal experience.....:o

This...all this!! I would just add to start by treating the dog with a flea bath and then the pill/drops. Drop the dog at the vet/groomer and have the house/yard treated while he/she is gone. I used professional services for 2 and 3, but I'm sure the at-home stuff is fine too.

thetalady 09-25-2012 01:54 PM

I will add that you MUST wash all dog beds & blankets at the same time you are doing everything else... and I really mean at the SAME time, not the next day. Treatment usually takes at least 2x to kill all adult fleas, then 2 weeks alter to catch fleas that were still in the eggs during the first treatment.

Sprinkle boric acid powder into carpets and let it sit for a while before vacuuming. It is cheap, sold in the stores in the laundry section. Non-toxic.

I use Trifexis, the HW + flea protection monthly pill. Works pretty well for us and I have one or two new dogs in my home from shelters every month!

thetalady 09-25-2012 01:58 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by shirley1929 (Post 2181003)
I would just add to start by treating the dog with a flea bath and then the pill/drops.

NO!! You cannot wash the dog within 24 hours before OR after you use the topical treatments, like Revolution or Frontline. The topicals work by spreading across the dog's body with the natural oil in the dog's skin. If you wash the dog, you remove those natural oils and the liquid will not spread evenly and cover completely.

shirley1929 09-25-2012 02:36 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by thetalady (Post 2181025)
NO!! You cannot wash the dog within 24 hours before OR after you use the topical treatments, like Revolution or Frontline. The topicals work by spreading across the dog's body with the natural oil in the dog's skin. If you wash the dog, you remove those natural oils and the liquid will not spread evenly and cover completely.

My bad...no need to shout...we use the pill, but I could have sworn that when I used the drops my vet told me to guard them right after the bath.

/sklunks back off into a corner...

thetalady 09-25-2012 03:44 PM

Sorry, Shirley, I can really get overly excited when it comes to dogs :o No sklunking needed on your part!

ForeverRoses 09-25-2012 04:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by sigmadiva (Post 2180999)
When it comes to treating fleas, you have to do a three step attack.

1. Treat the dog. I have been using Frontline and it works well for me. I know about the new pill, but I have not used it yet. I would like to switch to it when I run out of Frontline.

2. Treat your living spaces, especially rooms with rugs and carpets. Like the commercial says, fleas really do love to live in your carpet. I have been using a product called Flea Stoppers. Basically its powdered boric acid. You sprinkle it into your carpets like carpet powder, sweep it in, and leave it there for a few days.

3. Treat your yard. There are a few products by Scotts and other companies that you can buy from Home Depot or Lowes. They are in the pesticide aisle.


I highly recommend doing all three at the same time.

I speak from personal experience.....:o

this! Seven makes a yard treatment that works quickly and well. and when you treat your carpet, make sure to treat your vaccum as well. put moth balls in the bag (if you use a bagged model) and if yours is bagless, be very careful when empting out the canister- and wash the canister to make sure you kill any eggs stuck in there! also treat/wash anywhere the animal lays- pillows, blankets, couches, etc.

trisigma212 09-25-2012 08:42 PM

I use Revolution on my cats. It also gets rid of ear mites, which my kittens had from living in a shelter before we adopted them. They are indoor cats, however, so no flea recurrence.

I will have to say, NEVER EVER EVER use that Hartz stuff that they sell at Wal-Mart and Target. Yes, it is cheap, but it basically does one of two things: does nothing for the problem, or kills your pet. There is so much information online about people talking about their pets dying due to the Hartz brand. It is not worth it to be cheap! Take the animal to the vet- don't try to save 20-30 bucks on necessary medication.


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