Melanie Reber
Frequent Contributor (5K+ posts)
Member # 3707
posted
6 non-toxic tips to tick-proof your yard June 21, 8:24 PM � Laurie Wiker - Wilmington Wellness Examiner
In an effort to avoid Lyme disease, some still turn to chemical treatments such as DEET to make their property less appealing to deer ticks. While the chemical DEET is an effective tick repellent, it also contains ingredients that can harm both people and the environment.
Fortunately, there are safe, chemical-free alternatives to DEET that can effectively discourage deer tick infestation in your yard and limit your risk of contracting Lyme disease. Here's how.
1. Keep the lawn mowed. Get rid of tall grass and brush, especially at the edge of your lawn, to eliminate the spots where ticks like to live. Clean up leaf litter too. Instead of tossing grass clippings and leaves into the garbage, consider composting them and use the rich soil in your garden. Once dry, grass clippings also make great mulch.
2. Create a barrier. Ticks don't like to cross paths lined with wood chips or gravel. Place a gravel or wood chip buffer zone between lawns and wooded areas to help keep ticks from crossing into your property. You can also spread diatomaceous earth around the entire perimeter of your yard as an inexpensive alternative that is easy to apply. Diatomaceous earth is a completely non-toxic insect killer that is made of silicate shells ground to a fine powder. The shells have razor sharp edges that lacerate the outer shell of the insect (flea, tick, earwigs, slugs, ants, etc.).
3. Shed light on woodpiles. Keep wood in sunny areas. Moist, wooded areas are inviting for ticks. Sunny, dry conditions are not. Clear brush and leaves where ticks live. Ticks can often be found crawling around messy woodpiles in shaded areas. If you keep the wood neatly stacked and in a spot that gets some sun, it will dry out faster.
4. Repel with a plant. Garlic, rose geranium, citronella, rosemary and other strong odiferous plants and essential oils are good mosquito and tick repellents. A bug spray made with these essential oils is also available and safe to spray on your clothing called Little Bugger. You can try planting American beautyberry bushes too. They're attractive plants, and the leaves have been shown to repel ticks.
5. Create "Tick-Safe Zones." Keep patios, play areas and playground equipment away from shrubs, bushes, and other vegetation. Regularly remove leaf litter and clear tall grasses and brush around your home, and place wood chips or gravel between lawns and wooded areas to keep ticks away from recreational areas and away from you.
6. Discourage deer. Deer are the main food source for adult ticks. Keep deer away from your home by removing plants that attract deer and constructing physical barriers that may help discourage deer from entering your yard and bringing ticks with them. If you live in an area where bird feeders attract deer, it's a good idea to remove them.
Please remember that NO product is 100% effective. We must be vigilant with tick checks even though we may 'think' our own yards are safe.
Posts: 7052 | From Colorado | Registered: Mar 2003
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cactus
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 7347
posted
Thanks for posting this! All of these are excellent ideas.
The barrier tip (#2) really works well.
We opted for rocks, rather than wood chips, after doing much research into which option would better repel ticks.
It's hard to say which option has been most effective for us, but since putting in our barrier path, we have yet to find a tick. (knock on wood)
Happy tick repelling, everyone.
-------------------- �Did you ever stop to think, and forget to start again?� - A.A. Milne Posts: 1987 | From No. VA | Registered: May 2005
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posted
Guinea fowl are another natural tick repellent if you are in a place where you can allow them to free range. They LOVE ticks and bugs but don't disturb gardens or flower beds. Thanks for this post!
-------------------- ******************************** Thanks and blessings to all who share themselves to ease the way of others Dx: MS 1/2006; Lyme+ 10/2008; in treatment with great success Posts: 22 | From Columbia Gorge | Registered: Dec 2008
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posted
Guinea fowl are another natural tick repellent if you are in a place where you can allow them to free range. They LOVE ticks and bugs but don't disturb gardens or flower beds. Thanks for this post!
-------------------- ******************************** Thanks and blessings to all who share themselves to ease the way of others Dx: MS 1/2006; Lyme+ 10/2008; in treatment with great success Posts: 22 | From Columbia Gorge | Registered: Dec 2008
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posted
I am bumping this up because the ticks are out in full force where I live. These ticks are freaking me out.
OH and I know the original message says that DEET is effective against ticks but I have read a lot of other places that it is NOT. So just keep that in mind and maybe stick to the alternatives listed here.
Take Care, Pam
-------------------- Sick since 10/2001. Tested CDC positive for Lyme 10/2008 through Quest and Igenex. Started treatment 1/2009 with LLMD. Lyme, Erichilosis, Chlamydophila Pneumoniae, Q Fever, Strep Syndrome and probably a few others I am forgetting. Posts: 451 | From Virginia | Registered: Feb 2009
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17hens
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 23747
posted
this is excellent! thanks so much!!
-------------------- "My flesh and my heart may fail, but God is the strength of my heart and my portion forever." Psalms 73:26
bit 4/09, diagnosed 1/10 Posts: 3043 | From PA | Registered: Dec 2009
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posted
great tips! i will need to try these out! we just moved back in the woods and are making way for a lawn!
Posts: 10 | From Wisconsin | Registered: Apr 2010
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