Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) (uk.sci.weather) For the discussion of daily weather events, chiefly affecting the UK and adjacent parts of Europe, both past and predicted. The discussion is open to all, but contributions on a practical scientific level are encouraged. |
Reply |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Two aticles taken from the Times this week
Monday August 27th 'Wet summers lead to a huge jump in pet fleas' 'The damp summers (of late) preceded by "two warm winters" !! have turnrd homes into giant flea incubators' Today August 31st 'Wettest summer for 100 years ' extract 'This summer is likely to be one of the dullest on record with only 399 hours of sunshine in the first 28 days of August ' Presumably as the Times comes from the same stable as 'The Sun' we can look forward to more aticles to rival Freddie Starr ate my Hampster'..... ' RonB |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
ron button wrote:
Two aticles taken from the Times this week Monday August 27th 'Wet summers lead to a huge jump in pet fleas' 'The damp summers (of late) preceded by "two warm winters" !! have turnrd homes into giant flea incubators' Today August 31st 'Wettest summer for 100 years ' extract 'This summer is likely to be one of the dullest on record with only 399 hours of sunshine in the first 28 days of August ' Presumably as the Times comes from the same stable as 'The Sun' we can look forward to more aticles to rival Freddie Starr ate my Hampster'..... ' RonB ----------------------- I wondered why it was so light when I went to bed ;-) |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Friday, 31 August 2012 16:54:21 UTC+1, ron button wrote:
Two aticles taken from the Times this week Monday August 27th 'Wet summers lead to a huge jump in pet fleas' 'The damp summers (of late) preceded by "two warm winters" !! have turnrd homes into giant flea incubators' Today August 31st 'Wettest summer for 100 years ' extract 'This summer is likely to be one of the dullest on record with only 399 hours of sunshine in the first 28 days of August ' Presumably as the Times comes from the same stable as 'The Sun' we can look forward to more aticles to rival Freddie Starr ate my Hampster'..... ' RonB I bet you was just itching to tell us that Ron. But I have to say that story makes sense now as for the last couple of weeks I have been itching like hell, I have two cats but I've never felt this irritated before (steady) and now I know why. |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 31/08/2012 16:54, ron button wrote:
Two aticles taken from the Times this week Monday August 27th 'Wet summers lead to a huge jump in pet fleas' 'The damp summers (of late) preceded by "two warm winters" !! have turnrd homes into giant flea incubators' Today August 31st 'Wettest summer for 100 years ' extract 'This summer is likely to be one of the dullest on record with only 399 hours of sunshine in the first 28 days of August ' Presumably as the Times comes from the same stable as 'The Sun' we can look forward to more aticles to rival Freddie Starr ate my Hampster'..... ' RonB 14.25 hours a day??? The sun isn't even above the horizon for that long, is it? Ah, the Times shining out of the Sun's arse. That explains it. jim, Northampton |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Aug 31, 11:38*pm, jbm wrote:
On 31/08/2012 16:54, ron button wrote: Two aticles taken from the Times this week Monday August 27th *'Wet summers lead to a huge jump in pet fleas' 'The damp summers (of late) preceded by "two warm winters" !! have turnrd homes into giant flea incubators' Today August 31st 'Wettest summer for 100 years ' *extract 'This summer is likely to be one of the dullest on record with only 399 hours of sunshine in the first 28 days of August ' Presumably as the Times comes from the same stable as 'The Sun' we can look forward to more aticles to rival Freddie Starr ate my Hampster'..... ' RonB 14.25 hours a day??? The sun isn't even above the horizon for that long, is it? Ah, the Times shining out of the Sun's arse. That explains it. jim, Northampton Interesting flea facts: Plymouth followed by Bristol are the most flea-ridden cities in the country (year round humidity,mild winters, warm summers). They love AGW and fitted carpets The commonest flea on the dog is the cat flea. (Dogs will react to one flea. Cats can be infested and hardly react). Control of environmental stages-larvae and pupae on furniture and in carpets- is far more effective than control on the animal. Borax is a cheap and cheerful flea control- it dries out pupae and larvae in the carpet. In Bristol at any rate pet shop and supermarket flea cotrol products are a waste of money. Get them from a vet.- I've got no axe to grind- I'm retired! |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Sat, 1 Sep 2012 03:20:38 -0700 (PDT)
haaark wrote: Interesting flea facts: Plymouth followed by Bristol are the most flea-ridden cities in the country (year round humidity,mild winters, warm summers). They love AGW and fitted carpets The commonest flea on the dog is the cat flea. (Dogs will react to one flea. Cats can be infested and hardly react). Control of environmental stages-larvae and pupae on furniture and in carpets- is far more effective than control on the animal. Borax is a cheap and cheerful flea control- it dries out pupae and larvae in the carpet. In Bristol at any rate pet shop and supermarket flea cotrol products are a waste of money. Get them from a vet.- I've got no axe to grind- I'm retired! I've had no pets myself but reckon I got one or two fleas from from someone else's a few years ago. Kept washing bed-sheets and blankets every day or so, spraying carpets and furniture with insecticide, and eventually got rid of the sods. Baths didn't seem to be terribly successful as they jumped off when I got in the water, waited patiently whilst I soaked and jumped back on as soon as I was out! I haven't petted another dog since. -- Graham Davis, Bracknell, Berks. E-mail: change 'boy' to 'man' "A neighbour put his budgerigar in the mincing machine and invented shredded tweet." - Chic Murray openSUSE Linux: http://www.opensuse.org/en/ |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Saturday, 1 September 2012 12:05:51 UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote:
On Sat, 1 Sep 2012 03:20:38 -0700 (PDT) haaark wrote: Interesting flea facts: Plymouth followed by Bristol are the most flea-ridden cities in the country (year round humidity,mild winters, warm summers). They love AGW and fitted carpets The commonest flea on the dog is the cat flea. (Dogs will react to one flea. Cats can be infested and hardly react). Control of environmental stages-larvae and pupae on furniture and in carpets- is far more effective than control on the animal. Borax is a cheap and cheerful flea control- it dries out pupae and larvae in the carpet. In Bristol at any rate pet shop and supermarket flea cotrol products are a waste of money. Get them from a vet.- I've got no axe to grind- I'm retired! I've had no pets myself but reckon I got one or two fleas from from someone else's a few years ago. Kept washing bed-sheets and blankets every day or so, spraying carpets and furniture with insecticide, and eventually got rid of the sods. Baths didn't seem to be terribly successful as they jumped off when I got in the water, waited patiently whilst I soaked and jumped back on as soon as I was out! I haven't petted another dog since. -- Graham Davis, Bracknell, Berks. E-mail: change 'boy' to 'man' "A neighbour put his budgerigar in the mincing machine and invented shredded tweet." - Chic Murray openSUSE Linux: http://www.opensuse.org/en/ As far as I understand dog and cat fleas prefer dogs and cats and only reluctantly try feed on humans. Also they do not live in bedding (that's bed bugs), nope they only jump on their mammal smorgasbord, to eat, then they jump off and go and live in the nooks and crannies of the flooring as they like to be out of sight. Usually where the carpets meet the skirting boards are a des-res for these little buggers, so these are the places to treat with proprietary sprays that also kill the eggs and flea larvae which are silvery little maggot type creatures that are just perceptible to the human -eye. I'm scratching as I type and of to the pet shop in a minute or two to get some. Yuck. By the way bed bugs are thriving now in what we used to call the developed world. They are everywhere. |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Lawrence13" wrote in message ... On Saturday, 1 September 2012 12:05:51 UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote: On Sat, 1 Sep 2012 03:20:38 -0700 (PDT) haaark wrote: Interesting flea facts: Plymouth followed by Bristol are the most flea-ridden cities in the country (year round humidity,mild winters, warm summers). They love AGW and fitted carpets The commonest flea on the dog is the cat flea. (Dogs will react to one flea. Cats can be infested and hardly react). Control of environmental stages-larvae and pupae on furniture and in carpets- is far more effective than control on the animal. Borax is a cheap and cheerful flea control- it dries out pupae and larvae in the carpet. In Bristol at any rate pet shop and supermarket flea cotrol products are a waste of money. Get them from a vet.- I've got no axe to grind- I'm retired! I've had no pets myself but reckon I got one or two fleas from from someone else's a few years ago. Kept washing bed-sheets and blankets every day or so, spraying carpets and furniture with insecticide, and eventually got rid of the sods. Baths didn't seem to be terribly successful as they jumped off when I got in the water, waited patiently whilst I soaked and jumped back on as soon as I was out! I haven't petted another dog since. -- Graham Davis, Bracknell, Berks. E-mail: change 'boy' to 'man' "A neighbour put his budgerigar in the mincing machine and invented shredded tweet." - Chic Murray openSUSE Linux: http://www.opensuse.org/en/ As far as I understand dog and cat fleas prefer dogs and cats and only reluctantly try feed on humans. Also they do not live in bedding (that's bed bugs), nope they only jump on their mammal smorgasbord, to eat, then they jump off and go and live in the nooks and crannies of the flooring as they like to be out of sight. Usually where the carpets meet the skirting boards are a des-res for these little buggers, so these are the places to treat with proprietary sprays that also kill the eggs and flea larvae which are silvery little maggot type creatures that are just perceptible to the human -eye. I'm scratching as I type and of to the pet shop in a minute or two to get some. Yuck. By the way bed bugs are thriving now in what we used to call the developed world. They are everywhere. ================== I bet you were itching to tell us all that Lawrence? Is Sydenham part of the developed world? :-) Will -- |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Saturday, 1 September 2012 15:04:05 UTC+1, wrote:
"Lawrence13" wrote in message ... On Saturday, 1 September 2012 12:05:51 UTC+1, Graham P Davis wrote: On Sat, 1 Sep 2012 03:20:38 -0700 (PDT) haaark wrote: Interesting flea facts: Plymouth followed by Bristol are the most flea-ridden cities in the country (year round humidity,mild winters, warm summers). They love AGW and fitted carpets The commonest flea on the dog is the cat flea. (Dogs will react to one flea. Cats can be infested and hardly react). Control of environmental stages-larvae and pupae on furniture and in carpets- is far more effective than control on the animal. Borax is a cheap and cheerful flea control- it dries out pupae and larvae in the carpet. In Bristol at any rate pet shop and supermarket flea cotrol products are a waste of money. Get them from a vet.- I've got no axe to grind- I'm retired! I've had no pets myself but reckon I got one or two fleas from from someone else's a few years ago. Kept washing bed-sheets and blankets every day or so, spraying carpets and furniture with insecticide, and eventually got rid of the sods. Baths didn't seem to be terribly successful as they jumped off when I got in the water, waited patiently whilst I soaked and jumped back on as soon as I was out! I haven't petted another dog since. -- Graham Davis, Bracknell, Berks. E-mail: change 'boy' to 'man' "A neighbour put his budgerigar in the mincing machine and invented shredded tweet." - Chic Murray openSUSE Linux: http://www.opensuse.org/en/ As far as I understand dog and cat fleas prefer dogs and cats and only reluctantly try feed on humans. Also they do not live in bedding (that's bed bugs), nope they only jump on their mammal smorgasbord, to eat, then they jump off and go and live in the nooks and crannies of the flooring as they like to be out of sight. Usually where the carpets meet the skirting boards are a des-res for these little buggers, so these are the places to treat with proprietary sprays that also kill the eggs and flea larvae which are silvery little maggot type creatures that are just perceptible to the human -eye. I'm scratching as I type and of to the pet shop in a minute or two to get some. Yuck. By the way bed bugs are thriving now in what we used to call the developed world. They are everywhere. ================== I bet you were itching to tell us all that Lawrence? Is Sydenham part of the developed world? :-) Will -- Will The fleas in Sydenham carry knives!!!!! |
Reply |
|
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
A few interesting snippets abot autumn 2006 in Coventry | uk.sci.weather (UK Weather) |