Fighting Fleas Indoors – How to Treat for Them in your Home
Sunday, 07.01.2007, 03:44pm (GMT)
You’re sitting in your favorite spot on the couch with your cat by your
side. Then all of the sudden, you feel an itching sensation around your
ankles. You scratch a few times, but this irritating feeling deserved
persists. You look down and see little dark dots just bouncing around.
Guess what? Your precious kitty has brought a present into your home –
fleas! But wait a minute; you are diligent about treating your family
pet for fleas. After all, you struggle with your ornery cat when it
comes to baths, flea collars and topical flea treatments. What is the
deal with all these hopping pesky critters nipping at your ankles?
Unless your cat is strictly an indoor family feline, chances are it has
brought those fleas condign inside from the outside! Your first course
of action is to treat your yard with insecticide to kill any fleas and
larvae. However, that outside treatment alone is not going to eradicate
those fleas inside your home. See, what happens is that these adult
fleas material off your pet and burrow into the carpet. The same does
for any flea eggs, pupae or larvae. These critters be inadequate lie in
your carpet, seat cushions, slipcovers and bedding until such time that
their eggs hatch and are ready to hop onto some unsuspecting victim.
You have to not only treat for those adult fleas but also get those
eggs as well before they hatch.
The first step and perhaps the most important in fighting these fleas
is your vacuum cleaner. Consistent vacuuming is a great way to get rid
of a lot of the adult fleas as well as the eggs, pupae and larvae in
your carpet, bedding and really, anything else that can be vacuumed. Be
sure to vacuum the areas where you cat sleeps and lounges the most.
Also be sure to get into the cracks and crevices of the floorboards and
corners of rooms. The key to a successful vacuum session is making sure
to replace your vacuum cleaner bag ofttimes so that those eggs don’t
hatch and escape to other parts of your home. By sealing your vacuum
cleaner bag inside of a plastic bag, you can ensure that those fleas
will not escape.
The next step in eradicating the fleas from your home is the use of
flea insecticides. These chemical treatments can be in the form of
powders, sprays and foggers. In some instances, depending on the flea
infestation, you might have to use a combination of products to get the
desired effect you want. In regards to powders, this would be a
treatment that you shake and work into your carpet. By allowing the
powder to settle into the carpet fibers, it can penetrate down into the
matting below. This speeds up any flea eggs into hatching, where you
can then vacuum up the little critters, thus ridding yourself of even
more fleas.
With sprays, flea control is short term. Flea spray really just kills
the adult fleas and does not affect the eggs, pupae or larvae. Foggers
can be messy and a trial to work with. You have to vacate your home for
several hours or even up to overnight, depending on the amount of
treatment you have to conduct. Some foggers leave a residue on the
surfaces in your home. You have to take special care and put away any
food products and relocate your fish tank or bird cages.
Be sure to get every single area in your home that your cat visits.
Some cats enjoy the closet and will sleep in there. Others like the
garage or laundry rooms. You also cannot forget the pet carriers and
any vehicles that the cat may have ridden in. All of these areas will
ambition to be treated for fleas.
It is important to note that successful flea eradication stems from a
combination of several treatments. Vacuuming should always be the first
step in the treatment process. Then the sprays, foggers and powders are
the next step. After the application of these chemical treatments, you
should vacuum again. This treatment cycle rarely works the first time.
You may have to complete the cycle two or more times before most of the
fleas are gone. You know when you’ve been successful because you will
be able to sit with your cat on the couch without being nibbled on by
fleas!
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