Two years ago I got sicker than a dog. After 10 days my wife took me to the Dr. On the way to the Dr I was thinking this is going to be a one way trip, I was so very sick. As soon as my Dr seen the bullseyes all over my body she knew I had lyme disease. A few days after the trip to the Dr I even got face paralysis. Please put the spray on. Northern Indiana
I know Brian and he has put a lot of time and research into this whole tick thing as it is such a problem in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Plus he is a great guy. Definitely worth checking out.
In 2011 I got Ehrlichiosis. One month later I developed encephalitis and meningitis. Final diagnosis was Post Ehrlichia Meningoencephalitis. It was a 9 week ordeal involving four trips to the ER, two by ambulance, two hospital stays of five days or more, 36 hours in ICU, three MRI’s, three spinal taps and all the other fun things like multiple IV’s on every limb, suicidal headaches and vomiting 17 times a day. Ever since then I use Sawyer Permethrin but I’m always looking for something safer.
I've been using Sawyer Permethrin to treat clothing and hammocks/tents for more than 20 years and frequent the tick infested areas of Wisconsin and neighboring midwest states. Never had a tick attach, except once on the Nemekagon River when I walked barefoot across mowed grass to get from the river to the campsite (75 yds)- got 3 attached. Be careful with the farm grade insecticides. Some are dual purpose, and contain a toxic fly repellent too. I tried the permethrin concentrate from Farm and Fleet on my new hammock 10 years ago and thought I ruined it!. Smelled like WD-40 hanging for a week outside. The very fine print said, " contains petroleum distillates"- no wonder. Permethrin is also highly toxic to pollinators like bees, and also fish, aquatic reptiles, and some pets (as noted).
Seven years ago, my wife died from a tick bite. She was in the VA ICU for a week but, they wouldn't give her the antibiotics. The tests for tick diseases are very unreliable. They finally did a blood smear which showed anaplasmosis. She started on antibiotics but died that night. There are 9 tick diseases in CT now. I use Sawyer Permethrin most of the year. I got tick sick in February this year so, now I will have to keep up the Permethrin year round. There seems to be a shortage of permethrin currently. I wear gloves, a respirator, and face shield when spraying. Good Luck, Rick
I’m so sorry. This infuriates me. I had to find a hospital that would listen to me about having two ticks on my back. I got treated relatively quickly but it still turned into a 9 week fight for survival. I can only imagine how I’d feel if my wife or kids were in peril.
@@derrickrr5516 You can treat your yard with a yard spray in the spring to kill the ticks for 3 months. It helps alot but, you have to use the protective gear. Good Luck, Rick
@@thetickterminator Our local hospital had 7 people die from tick diseases that year. I try to spray Cutter 300' out from my house each April. Unfortunately, this year the weather did not co operate. I only did 100'. The Cutter works for 3 months. Good Luck, Rick
Sorry for your loss. Looks like the VA is back where it was in the 80s dumpster. I see they just busted the VA again recently for funds misappropriation. Same old tale , took the money to hand out to seniors management for bonuses. So much for dedication to the troops, rotten at the top like the rest.
I use the farm grade stuff, and mix it at 1% strength by the gallon. I then submerge my clothes the permethrin and let them get soaked through. Then I squeeze out the excess (squeeze - not wring!) and hang them to dry. Doing it this way I go a full year between treatments and never see any drop in effectiveness.
@@MidwestBackpacker Because it leaves behind a larger amount of the permethrin to dry into the fibers of the cloth. Also, wringing in general is not good for cloth fibers.
US military also uses 1%. People that fear permethrin don't seem to realize that it is used for lice and scabies treatment in humans and thus, is applied directly to the head and skin, even in young children. There is no data that says the stuff you get at farm store is any less safe either, so the comment in the video that it isn't "as safe" is unfounded.
West Nile... My partner was a very healthy 63 yrs old. Runner, surfer, bicycler, hiker. Vacationing in Calif, I planned a day hike for us. Several days later my partner was in the hospital ICU. He was 100% awake and aware, but paralyzed from the nose down. Imagine being paralyzed, trach-ed & on a ventilator, with catheters, and a feeding tube, able to do nothing more than blink your eyes, knowing that if you survive, this is probably how you'll live for of the rest of your life. For my partner, the rest of his life was 4 weeks of physical pain and mental anguish. There's no cure. Statistically, few get this sick, but why take the chance when there are repellents? Thank you for this important video!
Great information! Thanks for sharing I will definitely order Brian’s product...working as a nurse and caring for patients with symptoms/side effects from the various diseases you mentioned is really heartbreaking...I’m out in the woods daily and I certainly want to keep ticks off me! Enjoyed the Arnold accent as well dude😂😂😂
Midwest backpacker thank you for the information it was very helpful. A well ventilated area would be outside wearing a mask would be a smart thing to do. Spraying of any chemicals should be done carefully not to ingest into your lungs and blood stream. Remember what this product is for then use common sense.
Thanks for this info! I’ve been using the farm grade for years but the smell is off putting for sure and of course the worry of the strength of it. Love your videos, Jeremy.
Dont forget you can send your stuff into Insect Shield and they process it "institutionally" and lasts something like 6 times longer than the do it yourself spray on Sawyer permethrin.
Good post. Insect Shield actually uses something similar to what the Tick Terminator does, and if I understand correctly, they saturate the clothing in a misting chamber, then let it cure and dry. They say it lasts some 70 washes!
4:09 I'm disappointed that you didn't show a plant doing something (planting) when you said you weren't a plant, after showing a cow mooing when you said you weren't a cow.
7:37 more missed opportunities. "I am not a doctor. I am not a scientist." We need video footage of these things after each disclaimer of the people and things you say you are not. How else will we know for sure? You set a precedent. So much disappointment here. Other than that, good video. haha
This is very interesting. I use Sawyers on my clothes and pack with great results. The biggest hassle is reapplying every 6 weeks. It would be nice to only have to apply it a couple times a year.
It probably matters what fabric you are treating and what it is coated with (DWR). Cotton probably holds on to it long. I treat cotton clothing once every couple years. I'm out almost weekly in ticket infested woods. My buddies treat there Nylon hiking pants 2 or 3 times a year and still get ticks more frequently than I. My hiking cloths are also white or light tan. I believe that helps too.
as an aside I hike/hunt/wade fish Central Southern Florida (AKA The Cracker Trail). Bugs can be pretty bad, "carry you away" is the local term. I use a lot of Sitka and Forlohs permethrin impregnated hot weather clothing. That stuff works well too, but it is expensive .
Thanks for the video. I'm now disabled with an unknown disease. Lyme's is one of the possibilities even though the official tests haven't shown Lyme's. If I was bitten by a tick and have a tick-born disease, the bite could have been decades ago. This product wouldn't have been on the market in time to help me. I still like the idea. I'm curious whether this product would be good for similar uses. For instance, I think bed bugs are similar to ticks. Maybe this is a good product to use for treating sheets occasionally to prevent bed bugs. I wonder whether this product would be good to spray along the threshold of doorways to repel ticks, mites, and similar bugs coming into a house. I keep snakes as pets. I wonder whether this product would be a good choice for treating the snake room occasionally to ensure that they don't get mites.
I get the 30% from a store that sells to exterminators and follow the directions in the booklet and spray my clothing and I also use it in my yard where the dogs go and lay in he grass.
BEST THING IS NEEM OIL, IT'S NATURAL AND DEFINITELY WORKS, GREAT FOR THE SKIN TOO, I HAD SCABIES AND PUT NEEM ON MY BODY AND DESTROYED THOSE MITES AND THE EGGS, GREAT RESULTS FROM IT
In Europe i cant order permethrin :( Only a permethrin for dogs available. I think this isnt safe because it contains: "Piperonil butoxid, emulsion A/G, nipasol"
Regardless of which option you use, keep in mind that permethrin is damaging to the nervous system of cats. So, if you have feline friends that may suffer exposure, you may want to reconsider using it.
what a genius "Lymes disease"... Lyme Disease, Lyme, named after a town in Connecticut... where it, Borrellia Burgdorphi, was first identified because of a cluster of juvenile arthritis cases. I have had it.
One downside to premethrin is that it effects fish reproduction. If you get it in water, it can mess with those ecosystems. It's still a useful repellent/pesticide (pretty sure it'll kill ticks outright), but if you're fishing or in a lot of water, be aware of the impact you may be having.
Farm grade is likely more pure and because its for live animals, the inactive ingredients are likely just as safe. Chem ignorance and chem phobia cost people SO much money. Ban dihydrogen monoxide!!!! for real...
Whenever I hear that something is FDA or government-approved, I think back to a farmer who told me of sitting in on a farm meeting one evening where a government guy who went around to farming areas in the 50s, told the audience of farmers that DDT was the thing to use as it was effective, safe, and government approved. To prove the point, he would dip a toothbrush in the DDT and brush his teeth...
I have read numerous recommendations, instructing that treated clothes be washed separately. I wash separately in cold water and tumble dry on low or no heat. I'm not sure what the reasoning is for washing separately. A treated t-shirt is against your skin, just as underwear would be. Skin absorption of Permethrin is very poor, and it is poorly soluble in water. Sweat does not re-constitute dried Permethrin into a liquid form.
@@maggiewagmore8778 that’s a pain if I have to wash treat clothing separately. Didn’t even think of the possibility that sweat could reactivate the liquid form. Good to know it doesn’t.
@@maggiewagmore8778 Tumble drying treated clothing will reduce the life of the treatment. Apparently, the treatment is mechanically worn off by the tumbling action and the clothing surfaces rubbing against themselves. Its better to drip dry treated clothing.
this guy got a free bottle, never even field tested the product, and did this whole video, ITS a commercial... just check the browser addon called sponsor skip
Why not just spray repellent on your clothes and hat? It's probably better for the environment than Permethrin. Especially to pollinators. I'm located in the upper Midwest too and I work and spend all my free time outside in it. I need insect repellent about 3 times a year. I've probably had one tick that actually bit me in the last 40 years. (a tiny Lone Star Tick)
DEET is notoriously bad for nylon and synthetic fabrics. It will wreck durable water repellency, and cause the membrane in GoreTex to become porous and ruin.
I have found that Sawyer’s Permethrin doesn’t do a dang thing to preventing ticks on my clothing. I treated three sets of clothing 100% according to Sawyer’s instructions. I ended up with at least two dozen ticks on me in less than eight hours while hanging out at my property in northern Michigan. Sawyer just doesn’t work.
It’s not designed to prevent ticks from getting on your clothing. It kills them when they get onto it and or bite. That’s why a better idea is to treat the clothing for the long term and use deet when actually out and about
This video is unfounded, EPA has nothing to do with your skin. It stands for the Environmental Protection Agency. This product is approved by the EPA because it has already been approved for use on some mammals. You just found a way to spend more money on the exact same product. I have an old nickel I have a new nicke. Apparently the new nickel is better and worth more because it's new
Introduced in 1973, permethrin has been around for 50 years. So not really recent. It is also approved by FDA in the USA for direct application to humans, so the side effects have been studied for acute use for lice and scabies: Adverse Reactions The following adverse drug reactions and incidences are derived from product labeling unless otherwise specified. 1% to 10%: Dermatologic: Burning sensation of skin (≤10%), erythema of skin (≤2%), pruritus (7%), skin rash (≤2%), stinging of the skin (≤10%) Nervous system: Numbness (≤2%), tingling of skin (≤2%) Postmarketing: Gastrointestinal: Abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting Nervous system: Dizziness, headache Miscellaneous: Fever (From UptoDate 2023.06.14)
@@MidwestBackpackerthen you should have added 1oz to 999oz of water to get 0.1%. If you wanted 0.5% you would add 1oz to 199oz of water. Either way that makes it significantly cheaper than any alternatives.
The is true but we can’t just assume everything is bad or else we’d had to live in a bubble. So we have to take the epa regulations into account but also follow up on it with outside sources.
The "I am not a horse" canard is rather tired, discredited and outdated. First of all, ALL veterinarian medications are made in the very same factories, on the same lines and equipment, and to the same standards as those for humans. Some of the warnings have to do with dosages, and are perhaps warranted as far as the stupider people are concerned. This is mostly just gatekeeping. In many places in the world antibiotics are sold over the counter, so people don't have to resort to using vet products. Back on topic, the 10% permethrin is the very same stuff. "The other 90%" is just "inert ingredients", i.e. the solvent/carrier fluid that is required to contain the active ingredient, and it evaporates after application. We're talking about fabric treatment here, not ingestion or injection of it. So the advertised product being "safer" is purely imagined. But thank you for the tip, I'll give the farm version a spin.
P.S. how many people ingest stuff that is arguably not fit for human consumption, and with unknown ingredients, i.e. commercial hot dogs, bologna, oreo cookies, "non dairy creamer", all the products with soy, etc.
Any difference in the smell of his permethrin vs the sawyer or farm grade permethrin? The sawyer is tolerable. The farm grade 10% I get from Tractor Supply stinks by comparison. Also,just wanted to note the auto captioning says "dick germinator" when you say "tick terminator" in an Austrian accent. Lol.
Mike look for Martin's brand, does not contain petroleum distillates, this is where the smell comes from. Martin's is water based and smell is minimal.
Andy's Metropolitan doctors Suburban types of don't seem to agree with your personal diagnosis and Johns Hopkins anyone will tell you that you know the Diagnostics are imperfect, many false negatives. Seriously these tick-borne diseases are no joke. I'm the lucky ones the taxi I have to argue with the physician but it knocks it straight out of me lucky me, that's doxycycline
We’re all animals...I’ll stick with the farm grade. Same stuff. Research what chemicals go into making that Melly fabric your wearing if you want to worry about chemicals. Good advice though. Thanks for entertaining us Jeremy.
@@MidwestBackpacker Neither does the farm-grade 10% Permethrin made by Martin's, which is available at farm supply stores. The smell is from petroleum distillates which the Martin's does not contain. But don't take my word for it....read the MSDS for it. I use it on clothes and gear. Stands up to repeated washings and I have no tick or chigger problems. I apply every 6 weeks or so. The Martin's also has instructions on mixing for application to dogs. And before anyone balks at the idea of spraying their dog with Permethrin, Sawyer markets a .5% solution for dogs, which is probably no different from their other products.
Generally agree. Just make sure you dilute it properly. If you are in a heavily infested bug area, just re-apply the Pemerthin more frequently than every six weeks.
10% mix is a very bad idea. The Military and Sawyer products uses .5% Permethrin mix for a reason, going higher than that concentration produces nasty health side effects on the skin, it's well documented. They recommend against treating underwear, even at .5% strength, for this reason, and every direction I've ever read recommends using Deet and not Permethrin directly on the skin. All that said, suggesting spraying 20 times higher than that at 10% without diluting it for the sake of convenience is a total facepalm. And the other 90% of the mix (farm version vs people version) is irrelevant, the Permethrin at 10% strength is bad for you no matter how you slice it.
If I'm doing the math correct on the Tick Terminator's "Duration" they are having you dilute it down to .625%. They definitely do NOT have you using it at full 10% strength! My suspicion is that it's basically what's in Sawyer's product, just in a larger, concentrated volume.
Two years ago I got sicker than a dog. After 10 days my wife took me to the Dr. On the way to the Dr I was thinking this is going to be a one way trip, I was so very sick. As soon as my Dr seen the bullseyes all over my body she knew I had lyme disease. A few days after the trip to the Dr I even got face paralysis. Please put the spray on. Northern Indiana
I hope you're doing better, sending good energy
@@Eggerzofthedezzertz so far so good, thank you.
I know Brian and he has put a lot of time and research into this whole tick thing as it is such a problem in Michigan’s Upper Peninsula. Plus he is a great guy. Definitely worth checking out.
The U.P. gets worse every year.
In 2011 I got Ehrlichiosis. One month later I developed encephalitis and meningitis. Final diagnosis was Post Ehrlichia Meningoencephalitis. It was a 9 week ordeal involving four trips to the ER, two by ambulance, two hospital stays of five days or more, 36 hours in ICU, three MRI’s, three spinal taps and all the other fun things like multiple IV’s on every limb, suicidal headaches and vomiting 17 times a day. Ever since then I use Sawyer Permethrin but I’m always looking for something safer.
I've been using Sawyer Permethrin to treat clothing and hammocks/tents for more than 20 years and frequent the tick infested areas of Wisconsin and neighboring midwest states. Never had a tick attach, except once on the Nemekagon River when I walked barefoot across mowed grass to get from the river to the campsite (75 yds)- got 3 attached. Be careful with the farm grade insecticides. Some are dual purpose, and contain a toxic fly repellent too. I tried the permethrin concentrate from Farm and Fleet on my new hammock 10 years ago and thought I ruined it!. Smelled like WD-40 hanging for a week outside. The very fine print said, " contains petroleum distillates"- no wonder. Permethrin is also highly toxic to pollinators like bees, and also fish, aquatic reptiles, and some pets (as noted).
I just placed an order. Thanks for the information, I never would have known about the alternative to Sawyer.
Seven years ago, my wife died from a tick bite. She was in the VA ICU for a week but, they wouldn't give her the antibiotics. The tests for tick diseases are very unreliable. They finally did a blood smear which showed anaplasmosis. She started on antibiotics but died that night. There are 9 tick diseases in CT now. I use Sawyer Permethrin most of the year. I got tick sick in February this year so, now I will have to keep up the Permethrin year round. There seems to be a shortage of permethrin currently. I wear gloves, a respirator, and face shield when spraying. Good Luck, Rick
I’m so sorry. This infuriates me. I had to find a hospital that would listen to me about having two ticks on my back. I got treated relatively quickly but it still turned into a 9 week fight for survival. I can only imagine how I’d feel if my wife or kids were in peril.
@@derrickrr5516 You can treat your yard with a yard spray in the spring to kill the ticks for 3 months. It helps alot but, you have to use the protective gear. Good Luck, Rick
Im so sorry for your loss. Hearing stories like yours and others keep me spreading the news about awarenesses and prevention!
@@thetickterminator Our local hospital had 7 people die from tick diseases that year. I try to spray Cutter 300' out from my house each April. Unfortunately, this year the weather did not co operate. I only did 100'. The Cutter works for 3 months. Good Luck, Rick
Sorry for your loss. Looks like the VA is back where it was in the 80s dumpster. I see they just busted the VA again recently for funds misappropriation. Same old tale , took the money to hand out to seniors management for bonuses. So much for dedication to the troops, rotten at the top like the rest.
I’ve always been a big fan of permethrin use. Getting it cheaper & lasting longer sounds great. 👍
I use the farm grade stuff, and mix it at 1% strength by the gallon. I then submerge my clothes the permethrin and let them get soaked through. Then I squeeze out the excess (squeeze - not wring!) and hang them to dry. Doing it this way I go a full year between treatments and never see any drop in effectiveness.
Curious. Squeeze and not wring. Why? Thank you.
@@MidwestBackpacker Because it leaves behind a larger amount of the permethrin to dry into the fibers of the cloth. Also, wringing in general is not good for cloth fibers.
Good info. Yep, farm grade no different than human grade. Just like farm grade "horse paste" ivermectin as acknowledged by Dr Piere Kory for covid.
US military also uses 1%. People that fear permethrin don't seem to realize that it is used for lice and scabies treatment in humans and thus, is applied directly to the head and skin, even in young children. There is no data that says the stuff you get at farm store is any less safe either, so the comment in the video that it isn't "as safe" is unfounded.
West Nile... My partner was a very healthy 63 yrs old. Runner, surfer, bicycler, hiker. Vacationing in Calif, I planned a day hike for us. Several days later my partner was in the hospital ICU. He was 100% awake and aware, but paralyzed from the nose down. Imagine being paralyzed, trach-ed & on a ventilator, with catheters, and a feeding tube, able to do nothing more than blink your eyes, knowing that if you survive, this is probably how you'll live for of the rest of your life. For my partner, the rest of his life was 4 weeks of physical pain and mental anguish. There's no cure. Statistically, few get this sick, but why take the chance when there are repellents? Thank you for this important video!
Where were you hiking? And to clarify, he got West Nile from a mosquito?
Great information! Thanks for sharing I will definitely order Brian’s product...working as a nurse and caring for patients with symptoms/side effects from the various diseases you mentioned is really heartbreaking...I’m out in the woods daily and I certainly want to keep ticks off me! Enjoyed the Arnold accent as well dude😂😂😂
People ask me what scares me in the outdoors. When I answer that it’s mosquitoes and ticks, they’re incredulous. Thanks for sharing this!! 🦑
Midwest backpacker thank you for the information it was very helpful. A well ventilated area would be outside wearing a mask would be a smart thing to do. Spraying of any chemicals should be done carefully not to ingest into your lungs and blood stream.
Remember what this product is for then use common sense.
Thanks for this info! I’ve been using the farm grade for years but the smell is off putting for sure and of course the worry of the strength of it. Love your videos, Jeremy.
Smell goes away when it dries and I don't understand your comment about "strength" as any concentrate will need to be diluted.
Awesome, I’ve never heard of Brian / tickTerminator.
I’ve used the farm grade permethrin ratio’d down for years.
Glad there is something safer!!
I wrote a short story several years ago titled. The guardians of paridice. It was about how tics and mosquitoes keep most people out of the woods
thank you! I got a tick borne disease twice and then starting using Permethrin.
Good info! I started using the Sawyer spray because the deet sprays were giving me headaches.
Dont forget you can send your stuff into Insect Shield and they process it "institutionally" and lasts something like 6 times longer than the do it yourself spray on Sawyer permethrin.
Good post. Insect Shield actually uses something similar to what the Tick Terminator does, and if I understand correctly, they saturate the clothing in a misting chamber, then let it cure and dry. They say it lasts some 70 washes!
@PhilAndersonOutside Lol seriously? I soak my clothes in a 0.85% solution in a bin overnight, and let it drip dry. Thanks for this info!
@@PhilAndersonOutside
Great review. Looks like a great product
4:09 I'm disappointed that you didn't show a plant doing something (planting) when you said you weren't a plant, after showing a cow mooing when you said you weren't a cow.
7:37 more missed opportunities. "I am not a doctor. I am not a scientist." We need video footage of these things after each disclaimer of the people and things you say you are not. How else will we know for sure? You set a precedent. So much disappointment here.
Other than that, good video. haha
the epa. will approve anything, if given enough money to say so.
This is very interesting. I use Sawyers on my clothes and pack with great results.
The biggest hassle is reapplying every 6 weeks. It would be nice to only have to apply it a couple times a year.
Minor point. Getting free stuff is compensation.
I just bought permethrin coated clothing from rovince. Been sick for 6 months due to lyme disease.
You can also have Insect Shield apply permethrin to your favorite clothes. Good for 70 washes and very cost effective.
Thank You
My friends like to call me almost. That's awesome
Thanks for the video. Just ordered 2 bottles of Duration. I'm waiting on my tic panel blood work now. Ugh.
We use the one from the horse aisle at TSC. We put it in a pressure sprayer and water it down. But when it's gone, I'll look at the other.
It probably matters what fabric you are treating and what it is coated with (DWR). Cotton probably holds on to it long. I treat cotton clothing once every couple years. I'm out almost weekly in ticket infested woods. My buddies treat there Nylon hiking pants 2 or 3 times a year and still get ticks more frequently than I. My hiking cloths are also white or light tan. I believe that helps too.
InsectShield will treat your clothing for you. It lasts up to 70 washes. You can buy treated clothing from them too.
You know the bullseye don't always show up the professionals will tell you so
Honestly, I always just go to my local Vet (military) Surplus Store. They've got a bunch of mil-surp Permethrin for like $2 per 12oz aerosol can.
Thanks for the tip, I'll check it out
as an aside I hike/hunt/wade fish Central Southern Florida (AKA The Cracker Trail). Bugs can be pretty bad, "carry you away" is the local term. I use a lot of Sitka and Forlohs permethrin impregnated hot weather clothing. That stuff works well too, but it is expensive .
Good to know. Thanks.
Thanks for the video.
I'm now disabled with an unknown disease. Lyme's is one of the possibilities even though the official tests haven't shown Lyme's. If I was bitten by a tick and have a tick-born disease, the bite could have been decades ago. This product wouldn't have been on the market in time to help me. I still like the idea.
I'm curious whether this product would be good for similar uses. For instance, I think bed bugs are similar to ticks. Maybe this is a good product to use for treating sheets occasionally to prevent bed bugs. I wonder whether this product would be good to spray along the threshold of doorways to repel ticks, mites, and similar bugs coming into a house.
I keep snakes as pets. I wonder whether this product would be a good choice for treating the snake room occasionally to ensure that they don't get mites.
Why the trees slanted
Iron mountain. In Michigan's beautiful upper peninsula. Yah,eh😅
Thanks, good info. Lime Disease can be debilitating over a long time.
I like buying that pretreated clothing from insect shield. Lasts a long time and it's easy
I get the 30% from a store that sells to exterminators and follow the directions in the booklet and spray my clothing and I also use it in my yard where the dogs go and lay in he grass.
Here's the story I'll take it. Beyond bird hunting in Wisconsin and Out My Backdoor I've had the Lyme disease four times lucky me Doxie
Great video. I will have to try this. Hope all is well. Crow✌️
And yet you apply wet in an enclosed area with no mask/protection???
Lack of common sense a product that kills ticks applying it with no mask and not a proper ventilated area. 😮
Id really like to know how it survives washings
Hi there backpacker....super thanx for the info!!! is it also possible to drench clothing in a bucket instead of spraying?
Yes
BEST THING IS NEEM OIL, IT'S NATURAL AND DEFINITELY WORKS, GREAT FOR THE SKIN TOO, I HAD SCABIES AND PUT NEEM ON MY BODY AND DESTROYED THOSE MITES AND THE EGGS, GREAT RESULTS FROM IT
Why do they call you, “almost” ?
Thanks, good info. 👍
If you use duration How many washes do you get
It depends on how strong you mix it.
Wish I had known about this before I got lyme.
Remember folks: Add chemicals to water! Never add water to chemicals. Stay safe and use protective equipment.
Wow good to know! Thanks for all the great info man :)
In Europe i cant order permethrin :( Only a permethrin for dogs available. I think this isnt safe because it contains: "Piperonil butoxid, emulsion A/G, nipasol"
There is a Sawyer Europe website. Have a Google.
Regardless of which option you use, keep in mind that permethrin is damaging to the nervous system of cats. So, if you have feline friends that may suffer exposure, you may want to reconsider using it.
If it's damaging to cats' nervous system, it's probably damaging to ours too.
Your Arnold impersonation sounds a lot like Dr. Doofenshmirtz ;)
Does it work also for TSETSE flies and tics in Africa ?
🤷♂️
what a genius "Lymes disease"... Lyme Disease, Lyme, named after a town in Connecticut... where it, Borrellia Burgdorphi, was first identified because of a cluster of juvenile arthritis cases. I have had it.
It’s rude to call out a speech vernacular not a signal for lack of intelligence. But your comment signals it
Symptoms of detoxification process is not a disease.
One downside to premethrin is that it effects fish reproduction. If you get it in water, it can mess with those ecosystems. It's still a useful repellent/pesticide (pretty sure it'll kill ticks outright), but if you're fishing or in a lot of water, be aware of the impact you may be having.
Just ordered some and by time it gets delivered it will be 52 bucks 🤦♂️
I had untreated Lymes for over a year. Not good.
Farm grade is likely more pure and because its for live animals, the inactive ingredients are likely just as safe. Chem ignorance and chem phobia cost people SO much money. Ban dihydrogen monoxide!!!! for real...
This. As if the cows are some superhero chem resistant animals compared to us.
LoL all that terrible scary stuff but goes hiking anyway.
Ive definitely been mauled by mosquitoes in Massachusetts and New Hampshire
Whenever I hear that something is FDA or government-approved, I think back to a farmer who told me of sitting in on a farm meeting one evening where a government guy who went around to farming areas in the 50s, told the audience of farmers that DDT was the thing to use as it was effective, safe, and government approved. To prove the point, he would dip a toothbrush in the DDT and brush his teeth...
Awesome advise. Stay crazy.
Do you have to worry about washing your clothes with permethrin on them with clothes that were touch your skin?
No
I have read numerous recommendations, instructing that treated clothes be washed separately. I wash separately in cold water and tumble dry on low or no heat. I'm not sure what the reasoning is for washing separately. A treated t-shirt is against your skin, just as underwear would be. Skin absorption of Permethrin is very poor, and it is poorly soluble in water. Sweat does not re-constitute dried Permethrin into a liquid form.
@@maggiewagmore8778 that’s a pain if I have to wash treat clothing separately. Didn’t even think of the possibility that sweat could reactivate the liquid form. Good to know it doesn’t.
@@maggiewagmore8778 Tumble drying treated clothing will reduce the life of the treatment. Apparently, the treatment is mechanically worn off by the tumbling action and the clothing surfaces rubbing against themselves. Its better to drip dry treated clothing.
this guy got a free bottle, never even field tested the product, and did this whole video, ITS a commercial... just check the browser addon called sponsor skip
Gain of Function gift from USA
Interesting. Nice share... Now get to the Choppa!!! 😂
Why don't we just design a tick-proof suit. Ticks can't bite through leggings for example.
Lyme not Lymes...😊
Why not just spray repellent on your clothes and hat? It's probably better for the environment than Permethrin. Especially to pollinators.
I'm located in the upper Midwest too and I work and spend all my free time outside in it. I need insect repellent about 3 times a year. I've probably had one tick that actually bit me in the last 40 years. (a tiny Lone Star Tick)
Permethrin stays on clothes for a long time and bug spray washes off. Permethrin doesn’t replace bug spray. I use both when conditions require it.
DEET is notoriously bad for nylon and synthetic fabrics. It will wreck durable water repellency, and cause the membrane in GoreTex to become porous and ruin.
I have found that Sawyer’s Permethrin doesn’t do a dang thing to preventing ticks on my clothing. I treated three sets of clothing 100% according to Sawyer’s instructions.
I ended up with at least two dozen ticks on me in less than eight hours while hanging out at my property in northern Michigan.
Sawyer just doesn’t work.
It’s not designed to prevent ticks from getting on your clothing. It kills them when they get onto it and or bite. That’s why a better idea is to treat the clothing for the long term and use deet when actually out and about
thanks for the tip! now share with us how you get your teeth so white? tia
I swear the ticks in the Ozarks are immune to it
This video is unfounded, EPA has nothing to do with your skin. It stands for the Environmental Protection Agency. This product is approved by the EPA because it has already been approved for use on some mammals. You just found a way to spend more money on the exact same product. I have an old nickel I have a new nicke. Apparently the new nickel is better and worth more because it's new
Ahhh 50 bucks with shipping… nah
Alpha-Gal. Mammal meat allergy.
I stopped using permetherin when i found out it's extremely toxic to cats.
Only when it's wet. Once it's dry, it is fine for cats to be near anything treated.
1 in 20 is 5% , not 0.5%
Introduced in 1973, permethrin has been around for 50 years. So not really recent. It is also approved by FDA in the USA for direct application to humans, so the side effects have been studied for acute use for lice and scabies:
Adverse Reactions
The following adverse drug reactions and incidences are derived from product labeling unless otherwise specified.
1% to 10%:
Dermatologic: Burning sensation of skin (≤10%), erythema of skin (≤2%), pruritus (7%), skin rash (≤2%), stinging of the skin (≤10%)
Nervous system: Numbness (≤2%), tingling of skin (≤2%)
Postmarketing:
Gastrointestinal: Abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting
Nervous system: Dizziness, headache
Miscellaneous: Fever
(From UptoDate 2023.06.14)
The original mix is .10.
@@MidwestBackpackerthen you should have added 1oz to 999oz of water to get 0.1%. If you wanted 0.5% you would add 1oz to 199oz of water. Either way that makes it significantly cheaper than any alternatives.
Do you know how many things that the EPA says is OK ,that the rest of the world says hell no !
The is true but we can’t just assume everything is bad or else we’d had to live in a bubble. So we have to take the epa regulations into account but also follow up on it with outside sources.
The "I am not a horse" canard is rather tired, discredited and outdated. First of all, ALL veterinarian medications are made in the very same factories, on the same lines and equipment, and to the same standards as those for humans. Some of the warnings have to do with dosages, and are perhaps warranted as far as the stupider people are concerned. This is mostly just gatekeeping. In many places in the world antibiotics are sold over the counter, so people don't have to resort to using vet products. Back on topic, the 10% permethrin is the very same stuff. "The other 90%" is just "inert ingredients", i.e. the solvent/carrier fluid that is required to contain the active ingredient, and it evaporates after application. We're talking about fabric treatment here, not ingestion or injection of it. So the advertised product being "safer" is purely imagined. But thank you for the tip, I'll give the farm version a spin.
P.S. how many people ingest stuff that is arguably not fit for human consumption, and with unknown ingredients, i.e. commercial hot dogs, bologna, oreo cookies, "non dairy creamer", all the products with soy, etc.
Any difference in the smell of his permethrin vs the sawyer or farm grade permethrin? The sawyer is tolerable. The farm grade 10% I get from Tractor Supply stinks by comparison.
Also,just wanted to note the auto captioning says "dick germinator" when you say "tick terminator" in an Austrian accent. Lol.
LOL. That's funny. The Duration has absolutely no smell. I couldn't believe it!
Mike look for Martin's brand, does not contain petroleum distillates, this is where the smell comes from. Martin's is water based and smell is minimal.
I can sell you some air approved for human breathing….$20 a bottle!
Andy's Metropolitan doctors Suburban types of don't seem to agree with your personal diagnosis and Johns Hopkins anyone will tell you that you know the Diagnostics are imperfect, many false negatives. Seriously these tick-borne diseases are no joke. I'm the lucky ones the taxi I have to argue with the physician but it knocks it straight out of me lucky me, that's doxycycline
LOL,These days who trusts the EPA and doctors.
You should definitely protect yourself from ticks by taking your HCQ pills and horse dewormer, instead
@@sugarba1 I like the apple flavored the best, still got a couple dozen tubes, lol
Smart people
We’re all animals...I’ll stick with the farm grade. Same stuff. Research what chemicals go into making that Melly fabric your wearing if you want to worry about chemicals. Good advice though. Thanks for entertaining us Jeremy.
Side note. Duration does not have an odor.
@@MidwestBackpacker Neither does the farm-grade 10% Permethrin made by Martin's, which is available at farm supply stores. The smell is from petroleum distillates which the Martin's does not contain. But don't take my word for it....read the MSDS for it. I use it on clothes and gear. Stands up to repeated washings and I have no tick or chigger problems. I apply every 6 weeks or so. The Martin's also has instructions on mixing for application to dogs. And before anyone balks at the idea of spraying their dog with Permethrin, Sawyer markets a .5% solution for dogs, which is probably no different from their other products.
Generally agree. Just make sure you dilute it properly. If you are in a heavily infested bug area, just re-apply the Pemerthin more frequently than every six weeks.
10% mix is a very bad idea. The Military and Sawyer products uses .5% Permethrin mix for a reason, going higher than that concentration produces nasty health side effects on the skin, it's well documented. They recommend against treating underwear, even at .5% strength, for this reason, and every direction I've ever read recommends using Deet and not Permethrin directly on the skin. All that said, suggesting spraying 20 times higher than that at 10% without diluting it for the sake of convenience is a total facepalm. And the other 90% of the mix (farm version vs people version) is irrelevant, the Permethrin at 10% strength is bad for you no matter how you slice it.
If I'm doing the math correct on the Tick Terminator's "Duration" they are having you dilute it down to .625%. They definitely do NOT have you using it at full 10% strength!
My suspicion is that it's basically what's in Sawyer's product, just in a larger, concentrated volume.