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Sock it to 'em. To determine if your pets have brought fleas into your home, walk across the floors (particularly carpeted areas) wearing white socks. The fleas will go for the socks, since they are attracted to vibrations and warmth, says Jeffrey Hahn, assistant extension entomologist for the University of Minnesota Extension Service and University of Minnesota Department of Entomology in St. Paul. You'll be able to spot them easily before they get to your skin. If your socks are dotted, you've got fleas. So give rugs a good regular vacuuming, then apply a flea-control product made especially for rugs. Various brands are sold in pet shops. Debug with some earth. Spread a little diatomaceous earth in the nooks and crannies and under furniture where you can't reach by vacuuming, suggests Richard Pitcairn, D.V.M., Ph.D., a veterinarian at the Animal Natural Health Center in Eugene, Oregon, and coauthor with Susan Hubble Pitcairn of Dr Pitcairn's Complete Guide to Natural Health for Dogs and Cats. Diatomaceous earth is a natural earthlike substance, the residue of microscopic animals that once lived in the sea. Its crystalline structure cuts through the waxy coating on fleas, causing them to dry out and die. Don't use the type used in pool filters, however. It is ground too fine and may be dangerous if inhaled. A natural, unprocessed form--Diatom Dust--is available from Eco-Safe Products, 7000 U.S. Route 1 North, St. Augustine, FL 32095. Be sure to wear a dust mask when you spread it. Wash all bedding--yours and your pet's--in hot water. If you have indoor pets, it's just a hop, skip and flea jump from your pet's hide to your snowy sheets. And once a flea or two are in bed, you'll get bitten while you sleep. So once a week, carefully roll up your bedding (to avoid dropping fleas or their eggs on the floor) and wash it in a hot, soapy cycle in your washer. Then dry it in a hot cycle of your dryer, says Dr. Pitcairn. This is especially important in the summer, when flea activity is highest.
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