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Post-TEOTWAWKI Pest Control – Part 1, by J.S.R.

Historically, guns and knives make barely a blip on the charts in their ability to kill when compared to mosquitoes, lice, and ticks. These killers trigger no motion sensors or metal detectors. They don’t need night vision goggles. They spare no one and are entirely indiscriminate in their attacks. It was true historically, and it is true now. It will continue to be true in the future. Focusing too much attention on Hollywood’s distracting scripts for doomsday scenarios where firearms do all the killing prevents people from preparing for the far more likely assassins that will find, wherever you bug out.

Fortunately, arming yourself with knowledge, skills, and supplies to defeat nature’s most lethal killers will cost less than a couple of boxes of ammo and doesn’t require any time at the gun range.

MOSQUITOES

When it comes to killing people, mosquitoes have no equal. During the summer months, they are difficult to avoid entirely. However, several measures can be taken to reduce their threat to you.

Preventing Bites

Those are the measures for preventing bites and disease. There is a vaccine against yellow fever, but it usually is only administered to those traveling to Africa and South America.

Antiviral herbs that have been historically used and found to be effective in treating yellow fever include elder, ginger, and licorice. Aspirin and other anti-coagulants should not be administered to a person with yellow fever.

As far as malaria is concerned, there are some anti-malarial drugs, but the only one that is effective and commonly stocked by those who prepare is doxycycline.

For all mosquito-borne illnesses, the treatment is basically supportive care—feeding, bathing, and reducing fevers. While the US currently doesn’t have a significant problem with mosquito-borne diseases, such may not always be the case. In 1878, a yellow fever epidemic wiped out over 30% of the population in Memphis, Tennessee. There is no reason why this could not happen again in a grid-down society.

LICE

Head lice are what we’re most familiar with. Head lice are about the size of a small sesame seed and do not generally carry disease. However, scratching may compromise the skin and thus introduce infections. Because they are less bothered by lice bites, children can become well infested before anyone notices. Sadly, lice spread quite easily from one child to another, especially through toys, combs, and brushes. A quick test for determining whether suspect flakes in a person’s hair are lice or dandruff is to see whether the flakes will shake off. If they do, hurray! The flakes are dandruff. If they don’t, then they’re probably lice. Another method of differentiating between the two is to use a black light. The nits will appear as blue dots near the scalp.

Body lice look like head lice, but they’re larger. They usually confine themselves to living on clothing and bedding, rather than in the hair. They only come out to feed and can go up to a month between feedings. And when feeding, they prefer the base of the neck and torso. Their bites look like small red, swollen bumps or welts and cause severe itching. In contrast to head lice, body lice can spread diseases like typhus and trench fever. Unchecked, they can actually bleed a person to death.

Pubic lice cause severe itching. Unlike their counterparts, they are more difficult to see due to their smaller size and preferred habitat, pubic hair. But they can also be found in mustache or armpit hair and eyelashes and eyebrows. Because they spread primarily through sexual contact, they are categorized as an STD, one which is not prevented by using condoms. They do not transmit other STDs.

The best prevention option for all lice, beyond strict cleanliness and hygiene, doing laundry routinely, and not sharing personal care items, is to use permethrin. As with most other insects, permethrin will not kill the eggs, but it will kill newly hatched larvae.

The best commercial products available over the counter for eliminating lice are RID and Nix, but they take time. Shaving is always effective.

A 2010 clinical trial in Australia demonstrated that tea tree and lavender essential oils in a carrier oil, massaged into the hair and covered with a shower cap, were more effective than commercial over-the-counter treatments.

Physicians often recommend Benadryl to relieve the itching.

Typhus

Body lice carry the bacteria that causes typhus. Both lice and typhus occur in the same crowded, unsanitary conditions such as are found with war, famine, refugee camps, and the homeless. The bacteria are transmitted when people come into contact with the feces of body lice, inhale the feces, or get them through compromised skin. Lice are incredibly prolific, and typhus is an efficient killer. It killed more than 10% of Germans during the Thirty Years’ War, over 150,000 Yugoslavs during World War I, and far more of Napoleon’s men than he lost in battle with the Russians.

Typhus symptoms begin seven to fourteen days after being infected, starting first with the sudden onset of a high fever, followed by influenza-type symptoms of headache and rapid respiration. About a week later, a rash appears on the torso, then spreads to the arms and legs, but not the face, palms of hands, or soles of feet. Photosensitivity and altered mental state begin in two to three weeks.

If a physician even suspects typhus is a possibility, he will begin treatment immediately. The only treatment is doxycycline. There are no known natural remedies. Without treatment, most patients will die. The usual adult dosage is 100 mg, twice per day, for seven to ten days.

TICKS

As with most everything in life, it is better to prepare and prevent rather than repair and repent. Several measures can be taken to avoid tick bites. A natural tick repellent can be made from essential oils (9 drops citronella, 6 drops peppermint, 6 drops tea tree in 1 tablespoon of carrier oil; apply often). Soybean oil is also reputed to be an effective deterrent. Permethrin, as mentioned above, should be applied to shoes, socks, and the lower twelve inches of pant legs and shirt sleeves. Ticks don’t drop down on you from above. They hang out in leaf litter and on shrubs. Place tick tubes in indiscrete areas around the yard and garden, especially where mice will find them. (Commercially manufactured tick tubes are available, but you can make your own by soaking cotton balls in a 7.5% solution of permethrin and placing them in toilet paper tubes. The mice take the cotton balls to build their nests. The permethrin doesn’t harm the mice, but kills the ticks that host on the mice and live in their nests.)

When returning from spending time outdoors in tick country, immediately remove all clothing and wash it in very hot water. Take a shower and check the body thoroughly, paying particular attention to the genitals, back of the neck, and behind the ears.

Should you find a tick, it should be carefully and slowly removed with tweezers. You want to avoid breaking off the head and leaving any of the tick’s parts in your body, if possible. If the head does break off, there may be some minor irritation for a while, but the disease transmission process will have been halted.

It is generally believed that if ticks are removed within twenty-four hours of attachment, no disease-causing bacteria or viruses will have been transmitted. However, doctors often prescribe a single dose of 200 mg of doxycycline as a method of prophylaxis in areas where tick-borne diseases are endemic.

Ticks carry several bacterial diseases. All are treated with doxycycline, usually in doses of 100 mg, 2 times per day, for 10-14 days. This is not to be interpreted as a prescription for treatment, but merely provided as information for what you may wish to stockpile for your family.

Rickettsiosisehrlichiosis, and anaplasmosis are bacterial tick-borne diseases that occur in the southeast and upper Midwest of the United States. If any of these are endemic to your area, study up on their specific symptoms and incubation periods. The treatments are the same as for other bacterial tick-borne diseases.

Tick-borne relapsing fever occurs mainly in the western US. Tick bites for this illness usually occur when people sleep in rustic cabins. The incubation period is usually seven days. The three-day fever periods are followed by a seven-day break, then another three-day fever, and so on. This is the only tick-borne bacterial infection that is normally treated with tetracycline or erythromycin, both in the same dosages: 500 mg, every 6 hours, for 10 days.

(To be concluded tomorrow, in Part 2.)

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Comments Disabled To "Post-TEOTWAWKI Pest Control – Part 1, by J.S.R."

#1 Comment By K in Tenn On February 1, 2020 @ 12:02 pm

Great article, thanks for sharing. Looking forward to the rest.

#2 Comment By Animal House On February 1, 2020 @ 12:09 pm

Thank you for this information; the how to and recipes are helpful.

#3 Comment By JV On February 1, 2020 @ 12:37 pm

The International Lyme and Associated Diseases does not recommended the single dose of Doxycycline. Any tick regardless of how long it was attached needs 30 days of Doxycycline. Doxycycline alone does NOT kill the malaria type tickborne illness Babesia. Malarone and Doxycycline combined for three to six months does. Trials on Disulifram are very promising for people who have chronic Lyme and Babesia. Bartonella is treated best with Doxycycline, Rifampin and Bactrim combined. I highly recommend sending clothes worn for outside use to Insect Shield. The clothes they treat with permethrin is good for 75 washes.

#4 Comment By Comingstorm On February 1, 2020 @ 3:04 pm

Have several friends with children who contracted head lice (from what they say, usually at school). Solution started with a couple who found a product called Clear Lice on line. They ordered it and were happy because the lice were eliminated. Seems word spread and quite a few of their friends encountered the same problem and tried the product and were very pleased with the results. Rid and Nix were mentioned but they said the results with Clear Lice were significantly better. Never had them myself so I can only go by what they said for what it’s worth. Good luck cause they all agreed the head lice were horrible.

#5 Comment By Bethany On February 1, 2020 @ 3:29 pm

Permethrin, the active ingredient in Nix and Rid, is available OTC in powder, cream, and concentrated liquid form in many farm and livestock supply stores. It is effective against lice, scabies, ticks, and mosquitoes. It can be used on both humans and animals, and also on crops. The downside is that it is toxic to cats, fish, and bees.

#6 Comment By VCC On February 1, 2020 @ 4:10 pm

As a very poor parent of 4 school age children, living in dairy farming country, winter lice outbreaks at school were commonplace. ” There is no shame in contracting lice, just in keeping them.” Close contact with large numbers of cows that are confined for weeks at a time inside barns and the result is going to be contracting lice. Add to that school bus transport, outdoor playtime, coatrooms, well you get the picture. with 4 children and 1box of RID costing $6, I had to come up with a CHEAP solution. Enter vegetable cooking oil and saran wrap. I slather on the vegetable oil, wrap the head turban style in saran wrap. Leave it on about a half hour to an hour depending on how much time you have. I strip the beds and put into large trash bags with lots of dog flea and tick powder and tie them off, then roll them around a few times while they wait their turn in the washer. Then back to the kids, wash their hair with dish detergent, DAWN works well, wash, rinse about 3-4 times in a row to get the oil out, may take a few days to get it all. Then repeat the process in 10 days. Don’t forget to treat yourself along with the kids, and any indoor pets.

#7 Comment By JE On February 1, 2020 @ 5:17 pm

Tics are not just in the wilds; I have found them in city, county and state parks as well as fishing access sites. While walking a path to a creek with my daughter, I asked her if she saw the ticks. Her reply was what ticks? There were six to eight ticks stacked on top of each other and looking like dried branches intruding into the path. There were hundreds of these “dried branches”. Brushing them with a cloth, you could see the stick dissolve and try to find a place to tuck in. This was in town. Thankfully, this was unusual even if it is not terribly uncommon.

Good article, definitely will try some of the organics as repellents.

#8 Comment By Red On February 1, 2020 @ 8:25 pm

Along with plain veggie oil, mayonnaise works great too. Had to use it to treat multiple teenagers at summer camp. It’s an old folks remedy.

#9 Comment By St. Funogas On February 1, 2020 @ 9:05 pm

The best thing in the world for tick prevention is chickens. During the three years I was building my house I would get over 200 ticks per year, sometimes 7 per day. I kept track by dropping them into a small bottle of alcohol I kept next to my tick forceps. The alcohol doubled to sterilize the forceps. After we got free-range chickens, the tick population dropped to zero. I only rarely get them any more.

I’m dying to try your DIY mosquito repellent on no-see-ums this summer, my most annoying pest when I’m hiking around in my woods. If all else fails, sounds like I can add oil and try is as a salad dressing?? 🙂

Thanks for sharing!

#10 Comment By Once a Marine… On February 2, 2020 @ 2:48 am

Great info, as usual from the author and comments.

My two cents: I have successfully treated Lyme Disease with colloidal silver. Always begin treatment as soon as you notice a tick or symptoms.

In addition to repelling mosquitoes, I kill them. Organically. Simply. I place five gallon buckets under the eaves of my garage and shed. That saves rainwater for later use. I watch them carefully, which is key here. When I see mosquito larvae, I dump the water onto whatever plant looks like it would like a drink. I have, I admit, slacked off and found the critters breeding from the water. Vigilance is so important.

Carry on

#11 Comment By Just Me On February 2, 2020 @ 4:15 am

During tick and chigger season, I shower daily with Pine Tar soap. I never get a tick, flea or chigger bite as long as I take my shower. No poison, spray or special treatments. Unfortunately, it doesn’t effect mosquitoes.

#12 Comment By Buck On February 2, 2020 @ 1:17 pm

As a kid, My dad, who grew up in Missouri, had us use Oil of Citronella as a mosquito repellent. It worked great, but the odor would cling to your skin for days and was an excellent people repellent also. The smell would fill a car and stay in it for several days.

#13 Comment By Guy On February 2, 2020 @ 2:49 pm

Keep in mind:
Permethrin is deadly to honey bees and cats.

#14 Comment By JM On February 2, 2020 @ 3:38 pm

Good article. One additional item I’d highly recommend stockpiling for crawling insect control is Diatomaceous Earth. It stores almost forever as long as you keep it dry, and it can be used to kill almost any kind of crawling insect with a hard exoskeleton. Since it kills by slicing open their shells they can’t develop a resistance to it, and it’s completely safe for humans and animals. You can even mix it in with your food storage to kill any insects that might get into it. Just one note on using it in your garden – it can also kill beneficial insects, so be very targeted in your application there.

#15 Comment By Vagus On February 2, 2020 @ 6:04 pm

I hadn’t heard of tick tubes, thank you! Back on the east coast we used deer feeders that applied permethrin to the deer with paint rollers while they ate.

I love diatomaceous earth, use it all the time to stop ants and roaches. You can literally eat it.

For mosquito control I’m a big fan of the Bt bacteria cakes. Similar to Once a Marine, I try to eliminate standing water except for a few select containers that I spike with the Bt.

#16 Comment By Jimbo On February 3, 2020 @ 5:10 am

I still miss readily available Diazinon. Used properly, It worked.

#17 Comment By GritsInMontana On February 3, 2020 @ 5:22 am

Growing up in the swamps as a child, then working in a tropical third world country with the WHO as an adult, I have slept many nights under mosquito nets. Talk about HOT! Ugh! You can’t use a fan – not even a ceiling fan- because the mosquito net acts like a blanket and blocks airflow OR it will invariably blow loose and then mosquitos are under the net with you. (You can’t really tuck a mosquito net in between the mattress and box springs once you are already in bed, though God knows I tried many times. And if you try to “anchor” the darn things, then the slightest breeze from the fan can cause them to rip.) Some of the most miserable sleep I ever had (or attempted to have) was in stifling hot climates underneath a mosquito net. The only thing worse than sleeping under a mosquito net is *not having* a mosquito net and being eaten alive by “skeeters”. Those teensy little salt water mosquitos are particularly mean and can always manage to find a way into the mosquito net with you. The only solution then is to suffer, or get out of the mosquito net, turn on the light, and try to find it. Of course, when you get back under the mosquito net, another 3-4 skeeters will invariably manage to join you….

Every time the temperatures here dive to -30F, I smile and think “yes, but no mosquitos!”.

#18 Comment By Pocahontas Patriot On February 3, 2020 @ 3:06 pm

Kerosene head-wash is the old-time, cheap, one-and-done remedy for lice I used when my kids would bring them home from public school. Home-school now. Yay!

#19 Comment By SaraSue On February 3, 2020 @ 4:49 pm

I contracted West Nile a number of years ago, complete with encephalitis and spinal meningitis, and I lived! I used to say, “and I almost died” because that was true, but it makes me sad, so now I say “and I lived!” It’s been a little over 7 years now. I never recovered my cognitive or technical skills that I previously had. My immune system was destroyed. But, I slowly recovered to the point I can take care of my life now – a long slog and I’m still limited. So… I’m a freak about keeping bugs at bay. Last summer, it was mosquitos, yellow jackets, and hornets. I kept a spray bottle in every location, wore long sleeves, high boots etc when outside. My spray concoction was water, rubbing alcohol, Dawn, and Eucalyptus essential oil. That spray kept the yellow jackets from nesting on and around my wood deck, under the eaves, etc., as well as discouraged mosquitos. I also hung up traps everywhere and burned citronella candles on the deck in the evening if I was outside. I check all my screens regularly and don’t usually leave windows and doors open. When I went fishing I was covered top to bottom, except my face, and used a commercial mosquito spray all over. In a grid down scenario, I would’ve most likely passed on without a capable hospital staff working hard to keep me alive. Thank you for the article. Unless, and until, you experience a deadly disease, you have no comprehension of how sick you can get. Take heed y’all, take heed.