Among tick repellents this seems to be the best product around.
But how well does it really work? Have any of you guys gotten ticks on you through areas you sprayed?
Is it the wonder spray it is claimed to be?
Been using it for several years. Seems like the pesky little chicks and tiggers are developing some immunity to it though. Last couple of years, I've had a few get through. When it first came out, I would regularly brush dead seed ticks off my pants legs, and never get bit.
I still think its the best thing out there, that I've tried anyway...
Remember, its a clothing treatment only!!! I don't know what would happen if you put it on your skin a lot, but I'm not taking any chances!
It has worked very well for me. Turkey season 2 years ago, ticks were bad on our lease. I was getting at least one on me every day. I treated my camo and socks and I had no more problems for the next 2 weeks I was hunting. You can treat 2 sets of closes with one can and is still effective after they are washed.
It works very well ! However don't trust yer life solely on it. Just one very good precautionary measure among many
I was hunting pheasants one day with a friend of mine and he had it on his pants and I didn't. Since it was his dog, he was going first through the thick stuff most of the time. I stopped counting at 52 (deer ticks) and he only had one on him. By that point, it looked like that one had lost his appetite for blood as he seemed to be curling up and dying. Another time i took a perfectly healthy dog tick and dropped him on my pant leg(didn't mash him into the cloth), he acted like i dropped him on a hot coal. Dead in a minute at most.
In my experience that stuff is a wonder. The problem is as with most anything in this life, there is no free lunch! Meaning, god only knows what kind of crazy cancer we'll all have from using it. But for now unknown cancer beats known lyme disease.
Take care
Nathan
It definitely works. But, remember that it is a neurotoxin. Use only as directed.(nut)
I've got to agree with Nathan.....I've been using the stuff for a few years now.Knock on wood I haven't had a tick on me.
I spray my clothes heavily around the first of october and hang them to air out.Then I give them a light spray again around the beginning/mid november.
Most of what I've seen available now doesn't seem as strong as it used to be. I wish I had an old can around to compare to the new. Still pretty miraculous stuff! CKruse
Been using it for almost twenty years...we buy it by the case...its not fool proof, but its the only thing that works for ticks...you still need to dress appropriately...tuck in your shirt cinch up pants legs, etc. I wear it at work and i use the long velcro straps around the bottom of my pants legs. Permithrine kills ticks so they may actually be crawling around on your pants for a minute or two and then fall off. DO NOT SPRAY THIS STUFF ON YOUR SKIN.
You can buy clothes (Bugoff) treated with permithrine, but they cost twice as much and it eventually washes off.
David
David
very good stuff. Saves me a lot of scratching and I got Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever once. Not pleasant at all.
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I'm glad to hear it. I'm about to buy my camo and I'm just going to get a one piece cover all. Spray the suit. And spray the clothes I'll wear under it.
Tucks pant legs into socks. I want to figure a good head net though.
Found one one my head while I was in the shower washing my hair. Not fun. I'm not scared of snakes, spiders, alligators, coyotes, or nothing like that but I run like a pansy from ticks. I did that specifically just a day ago on an overgrown trail. I hate the things.
Permanone works very well but it makes me slightly sick. I guess it's sweat absorbing it from the clothing somehow but every time I use it, I get the green-apple-quick-step. Everytime.
Nothing serious, but I figger if it will do that during one appication, the buildup over the years could be bad news. Ain't worth the risk to me besides, it's more fun to have Jill check me for ticks when I come home :-)
Man Biggie waiting for my coffee to brew,hurricane heading our way but you woke me up and a laugh with that one.The pic going through my mind won't erase easy.Kip
Its worked for me, I've never had a tick on me when using it, but hundreds without it. Very important to read and FOLLOW the directions.
Just had a good chuckle on that one Biggie!
Note to self. Bring extra TP. Not just for blood trails anymore. Check.
Lol. Thanks for the honest tip though. Seriously. Not everyone would admit that and it's worth knowing.
With that advice I'll just spray it on my outer layer and take my chances on the inner layer. I don't want to be concentrating on keeping my cheeks pinched during the shot instead of form.
Definitely let it dry before using. :readit:
Like many, I picked up on it down in VA and have used it faithfully since.
Since they claim it will last active for 2 weeks and through one clothes machine washing, I figure once it's dry, it is pretty inert to us people types....
Maybe "Biggie" is kinda "buggy?" Sorry ole boy, the devil made me do that one, Mr. Hoffman!" :)
I am known to forget, then spray and wear the clothes while damp.. that kinda worries me, but as said, not as much as the freakin diseases from biting/sucking insects!
I use it on my head net, clothes, etc. I find it has nearly no odor or smells like air dried clothes when it's dry. I tend to spraya nd let line dry for a good long day before I put it away.
Compared to other treatments guys hunting with me use, I'm convinced it works on skeeters, ticks, and such..watched em crawl up my pant leg 6" and drop off! Just like the lable! Imagine that! :)
Pygmy, it's funny what gives us the shivers based on where we live and hunt. Here in CT. ticks are a nightmare. Hell, Lyme disease was discovered here in Lyme, CT. I've had Lyme disease twice. I'm not afraid to venture out in the woods though but the thought of roaming through a Loisianna swamp scares the crap out of me. Maybe it's all of those country swamp songs I've listened to over the years,lol.(nut)
Yeah it really is funny those kinda things. In these narrow bayous I accidentally run my kayak into the biggest sleeping gators you can imagine. They feel like a 2x4 swatted your butt under the kayak plastic when they take off. I shrug it off but when I saw a giant deer tick hanging off of a weed at shoulder level I took off the other way.
Trying to convince myself that scouting what trails are active a few weeks before opener really isn't necessary. lol
I have had ticks climbing up my pants leg and watched them fall off and die after exposure to the permanome. Great Stuff. I always have it in my SUV.
Whump Sez; "Biggie"---sometimes you make me feel good about myself[grin] Hunt safe.
Where have all you guys been buying your permaone? I can never find it in stores around here, where ticks should be the local team mascot.
Well I could be the poster child for the stuff. :scared: One spring I sat in some tall grass of an old food plot turkey hunting.Wound up with over 300 ticks and a trip to the doctor for treatment for lyme in the end.Treated all my clothes with it and hunted the same place the next weekend.I would watch ticks crawl up my pants leg start slowing down and die before they passed my knee.Came home with NO ticks at all!It is the best thing ever invented for a hunter as far as I am concerned. jmho
QuoteOriginally posted by Shooty1:
Where have all you guys been buying your permaone? I can never find it in stores around here, where ticks should be the local team mascot.
Walmart sells it here under the "Repel Permanone" name. Coulston's Duranon is the same stuff.
David
I buy it by the box, whenever I see it, mostly at the hunting shows.
Swamp Pygmy,
Tick identification is important. Everyone is worried about Lyme Disease. So how do I protect myself, my family -and my dog- from this terrible plague? Knowledge. Tick repellent. Tight clothing. Inspections. But what if you've done all that, and you still find an engorged tick? You need to be able to differentiate, or identify, between the different tick species to avoid unnecessary worry and unnecessary trips to the vet.
The tick that primarily carries lyme disease is I. Scapularis, also called the Black-Legged Tick, or the Deer Tick. The deer tick is very very very tiny, approximately the size of a fleck of black pepper. They are very nearly impossible to see on a dog, and can still be difficult to see even when engorged.
The common dog tick can range in size from very small, but clearly visible, to quite large. Then when they're engorged, they blow up like a big greyish/greenish blob
Those gators scare teh crap out of you all right, till you get lymes or RMSF and then you know what problems really are!
Put it on your clothes outdoors, hanging on a fence or something, and give them time to dry.
Don't forget your belt area of both the shirt and the pants.