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Survival is not a time to act ‘coy’ or to be shy.
You need to check your whole body at least once a day for bugs.
Four eyes are better than two. If you have a companion, check each other.
If you don’t keep clean you’re in trouble.
Ingestion of bad stuff is bad enough (worms, water parasites, bacteria, etc) but dirt attracts common body feeders like:-
Bed bugs, Body lice, Hair louse, crabs, and scabies mites.
All guaranteed to make your life a little bit more like hell and open you up to secondary infections.

Body Lice
Firstly these are not the same as hair lice.
Dirty Unsanitary conditions, not washing yourself or your clothing, all adds to your chance of getting infected.

These nasty little things willing invade the “great unwashed” and unfortunately those who come in contact with them.

They’re blood suckers that lay their eggs in the seams of your clothing (or sleeping bags).
Eggs are white or yellowish like tiny little grains of rice.
When hatched (1 week or so), they start to bite.
Full sized they are 2-4 mm long, greyish-white 6 legs.
Females lay the eggs but who cares! It’s their effects I want to deal with.

A lice bite itches. Intensely.
That makes you scratch, that opens the skin, and secondary infections get in.
The most worrying one is Typhus but you opening the skin (especially with dirty hands) can let all sorts of other bugs in from Tetanus upwards.

How to prevent and deal with them ( A 3 pronged attack).

1. Keep away from the infected and dirty places.
On the road that’s hard. Isolation is best. Communes or shared accommodation need to be avoided especially the worn out comfy settee.
That’s difficult when “no fixed abode” because like-minded people gather and it only takes one less careful than you are to transmit the bugs.

2. Keep clean.
Not only you the person but your clothing and bedding.
Bugs don’t like hot washes, hate tumble dryers, and fresh air / sunlight.
CDC reckon that leaving the clothes unwashed, but unworn for a full week, also results in the death of lice and eggs.

3. Keep them away.
I put down a 7 x 8 plastic sheet before setting up.
Although it sometimes added to condensation, it’s a formidable barrier to bugs together with a light dusting of bug powder.
I carry a simple shaker bottle of anti crawling insect powder and dust round where I put my bedding.
Probably not good for you breathing in 0.5% w/w Permethrin the whole night but it works for me.

Ticks
The big worry for the UK prepper is Lyme disease.

Preventive measures against infection include the following:
Wearing appropriate clothing.
REGULAR careful inspection of skin.
If ticks are found, FAST effective removal of the tick.

When removing theses things don’t mess about with Vaseline, crushing them, or even cigarettes.
Use a tick hook or a pair of tweezers.
Your aim is not to crush but to grip as near to the skin as possible, twisting the tick off complete with the “pincer’s” it is hanging on with.
Once off you can do the crush, burn, or hit it with the hammer bit.
Then disinfect the wound site.
Be cautious of red swellings or flu-like symptoms. GET MEDICAL HELP.

Fleas
Black death (Y pestis) is the one that springs to mind.
Rickettsia Typhus and Lyme Disease are also a worry.

Cleanliness is vital round where you are staying.
Again I use my plastic sheet and my crawling insect “sprinkle dust”.
It only takes a second for one of these little beauties to jump on you and rather like a mosquito, one bite is enough.
Cover up well preferably in non-woolly outside garb.
They don’t like things they cannot cling to.

If you have a dog, protect the dog too.
Two reasons, firstly to protect you, secondly the dog.

There is little you can do to isolate yourself from these bugs.
In the open, if you know an area is infected, STAY AWAY.
That’s really the only advice I can offer.

If you are shooting rats, squirrel, or other warm-blooded mammals, the chances are they will be carrying fleas.
That’s why I always wear gloves when handling carcasses and only use tongs when dealing with “RAT” type things.

Don’t forget though, nothing to do with fleas, but animal urine carries LEPTOSPIROSIS.

This infection is commonly transmitted to humans by allowing water that has been contaminated by animal urine to come in contact with unhealed breaks in the skin, the eyes, or with the mucous membranes.

Head Lice (nits)
These things are so difficult to guard against.
If your child goes to school, they’re almost guaranteed to catch a dose.
It’s nothing to do with cleanliness either. The dirty and clean suffer the same.

Chemicals are becoming less effective.
Malathion works for now but don’t smoke when using it, as its flammable.
Permethrin products are now becoming less effective due to lice resistance.

However, more natural methods are proving to be popular as well as effective.

Essential oil shampoos work. There are plenty to choose from.
Personally when I’ve had a dose of nits, I nuke them with a OTC shampoo first then use essential oils to stop instant reinfection.

The time proven use of a nit comb picks up the hatched lice as it is combed through the hair.
This is best done on wet hair with a dose of conditioner.
Rubbing the scalp irritates the adult lice, making them move and the conditioner makes the hair too slippery for the lice to grip and move easily.

Kerosene treatment works but on a sensitive scalp it feels like acid! (Personal experience)
Go outside, wear old clothing, soak your hair in kerosene and read something for an hour.
Wash it out. Hasn’t failed me yet.
NOT advisable on babies or very young children.

In case you don’t know, kerosene aka paraffin is flammable.

NEED I SAY “DON’T SMOKE”, NO NAKED LIGHTS, ETC.

The cycle of these nasty critters is somewhere round three weeks.
That’s a long time and loads of little eggs. It takes time to clear an infestation.
Just as you think it’s all gone, in come the kids and it all starts again.
Don’t think that braiding your hair keeps them out. It helps but isn’t 100% nit proof.

As for bedding and clothing?
Hot wash, hot dry as with all these creatures works.

Scabies
It’s a rash, itches like mad so you’ll scratch and thus open the skin to secondary infections.

It’s contagious, and it’s caused by a tiny mite. 1/3mm across.
It burrows under the skin and the main reaction is from it’s “POO”.

It’s been associated with sex but is nothing to do with the act, just the close body contact.
Some agencies even call it an Sexually Transmitted Disease (STD). Daft that one!

Prevention?
Keep away from the infected. Don’t share clothing or bedding.
Wash all bedding in a hot wash and use a hot dryer.
It’s unlikely there are a lot of scabies mites on a body so nuking the whole house with an insecticide may be a little excessive.

Cure?
A Permethrin cream rubbed all over the body, left soaking in all night, and washed off the next morning. Leave for a week and repeat.
There are some that say swimming in salt water kills the mites too.

Bed Bugs.
They get into your bedding in all sorts of ways.
Mainly from others, pets, rucksacks that have brushed up against egg infested things, to being carried about by furry critters.
Infestations are rife throughout the world and they are known as the “hotel bug” with good reason.

Blood feeders they aren’t so friendly as body lice and can remain alive for months without food i.e. you.
Again the thing to worry about is secondary infections. Treat all bites with antibiotic cream.
Try not to scratch (which is virtually impossible).

You keeping clean isn’t going to help here, it’s your bedding you’ve got to watch out for.
Visually they are 4-5 mm, pale to brown.
Look like little cockroaches BUT here’s a rub, the cockroach loves to eat them.
They have a sweet musty smell and you’ll see blood coloured ‘waste’ on the sheets.

They don’t like hot washes so your bedding needs to be washer proof.
They also don’t like tumble dryers so again, your stuff needs to be shrink proof.
Vacuum your bedding. (Bit difficult in the field) is the traditional advice.
Turn out your bedding everyday and hang it to air. Sunlight they HATE.
Again, I used to dust the inverted bag with roach power whilst it aired and after a little shake, I would pack the bag away.

Crab lice.
Usually associated with sexual activity.
That’s not the bottom line though, shared towels, clothing, beds or storage can all harbour them.
Hot bunking is notorious for cross infecting even the cleanest of people.
Good news for us dog owners, they don’t carry them.

TPTB say that you can’t catch them from toilet seats.
Like all government advice, it’s based on a nice regularly cleaned toilet where nothing can cling to surfaces not some filthy loo in a public place. If there are dark little objects on the loo seat?
I’d think twice before “squatting your bot”.

They don’t carry disease but as always the itching makes you scratch and that lets in secondary infections.

They are 1-2 mm long, dark brown to black “crab like” in appearance.
They say that when they appear on the eye lashes, you’re pretty well covered in them.
Treat yourself first, put clean clothing on, and wash EVERYTHING.
Hot wash and a hot tumble dryer is best.

If you can’t launder stuff, seal it in a bag for at least two weeks.
(I have no proof this works though, just what I’ve read off the CDC site).

Lice killer lotions containing 1% permethrin or a mousse containing pyrethrins and piperonyl butoxide can be used. The dead bodies will probably stick to your hair so you’ll need a nit comb to brush them out.
For the eyebrows / eye lashes, you should use medical grade Vaseline mixed permethrin.
good post paul thanks will upgrade my bob
Update on Ticks and Lymes desease / borreliosis

I spend a lot of time in the open countryside in a heavily infested area that also harbours Lymes desease. These little critters are a significant risk and very bad news indeed. Anyone who has not encountered them should note that they can be minute in size, down to just a couple of milimetres across

If you get bitten by an infected one, often first symptom is a red / blue discoloration of the shin in a circle around the bite / parasitic entry point ( these things burrow into your kin and pump up on blood from your system until they are the size of a small grape) The infected wound is not especially painful.

Medical help MUST be sought immediately.

Removal hooks and plier type devices are available from vetinary clinics. My partner is the specialist at removing these horrible beasties from our dog.... I seem to remember that they have to be removed with an anti-clockwise twist of the securely attached pliers.... maybe Paul can confirm this?

To reduce risk in infested areas: avoid sitting under trees in long grass, avoid kicking up leaf litter after the winter ( especially if wearing shorts), avoid as far as possible being first one on the trail in the morning, and if you are trail leader avoid touching branches and twigs overhanging deer / boar paths. Having a dog with you is a great idea, as Ticks will preferrentially attach to the dog rather than you. ( Sorry dog)










I did this little picture for my blog, is this any help LS?

[Image: ad8dc97d.jpg]
Damn good post sir, very informative, Hey didnt you forget that other blood sucking parasite the lesser spotted socialist? Smile
(18 September 2012, 08:40)NorthernRaider Wrote: [ -> ]Damn good post sir, very informative, Hey didnt you forget that other blood sucking parasite the lesser spotted socialist? Smile

you ment to say tory NR
Spot on Paul.

I suggest that everyone keeps a copy of this, just in case


(18 September 2012, 08:40)NorthernRaider Wrote: [ -> ]Damn good post sir, very informative, Hey didnt you forget that other blood sucking parasite the lesser spotted socialist? Smile

Good call NR: But that parasite is most difficult to eradicate humanely don't you find? Slotting with a good calibre round is the best solution, or so I've heard?
(18 September 2012, 10:06)Lightspeed Wrote: [ -> ]Spot on Paul.

I suggest that everyone keeps a copy of this, just in case


(18 September 2012, 08:40)NorthernRaider Wrote: [ -> ]Damn good post sir, very informative, Hey didnt you forget that other blood sucking parasite the lesser spotted socialist? Smile

Good call NR: But that parasite is most difficult to eradicate humanely don't you find? Slotting with a good calibre round is the best solution, or so I've heard?





the pro with that is that they are armed and dont give a fuck about the law or or going to prison your life so they shot back alot
Nice bit about those parasites you're talking about NR is they don't bite my dawg.
As soon as they do that, I'll probably get 3 squares and free accommodation courtesy of HMP.
an easy way to remove ticks is to dab them with petrol, this causes them to remove there head and they fall off.
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