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Actually, DEET is not what is usually used to treat sleep liners. When people want to treat clothing and sleep liners they use permethrin. In fact, it's what manufacturers of "bug proof" clothing use. It's not something that you can spray inside an albergue around other people. (and please don't spray DEET inside an albergue either!) If you want to use permethrin, you must use it before you leave for the Camino. It needs to be sprayed in a well ventilated area (preferably outside), and you shouldn't touch the surfaces that you spray with bare skin until it is completely dried.I will treat my Sleep Liner with DEET before arriving at SJPdP ... however I will need to keep refreshing it as I travel for 40 days.
Can you Buy DEET at places along Camino Francés ?
Perfect!Thanks 'trecile'
I have found our PaddyPalin Sydney store carries a Permethrin Bug product. I will purchase it.
Buen Camino
BruceS
Exactly the product I use. No odor, not oily and not sticky.Actually, DEET is not what is usually used to treat sleep liners. When people want to treat clothing and sleep liners they use permethrin. In fact, it's what manufacturers of "bug proof" clothing use. It's not something that you can spray inside an albergue around other people. (and please don't spray DEET inside an albergue either!) If you want to use permethrin, you must use it before you leave for the Camino. It needs to be sprayed in a well ventilated area (preferably outside), and you shouldn't touch the surfaces that you spray with bare skin until it is completely dried.
Here's one permethrin product
Permethrin Insect Repellent for Clothing Gear and Tents
For use on clothing, tents, sleeping bags, and other outdoor gear, Sawyer Permethrin is more than just an insect repellent — it actually kills ticks, mosquitoes, spiders, chiggers, mites, and more than 55 other kinds of insects. Permethrin is also effective against the Yellow Fever Mosquito...sawyer.com
That's why I spray my sleep gear, inside my pack, and all my cloth stuff sacks. If they get into my pack I don't want them coming out alive!Hate to bust your bubble, but permethrin does not repel bed bugs. It kills them, but it can take 12 hours or more of exposure before they die. https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/4/2/230
Me too. I figure they'll die on the long trip home!That's why I spray my sleep gear, inside my pack, and all my cloth stuff sacks. If they get into my pack I don't want them coming out alive!
I agree I do my sleeping bag, backpack, and a fitted sheet and have been safe I would use nothing else than Permethrin.Actually, DEET is not what is usually used to treat sleep liners. When people want to treat clothing and sleep liners they use permethrin. In fact, it's what manufacturers of "bug proof" clothing use. It's not something that you can spray inside an albergue around other people. (and please don't spray DEET inside an albergue either!) If you want to use permethrin, you must use it before you leave for the Camino. It needs to be sprayed in a well ventilated area (preferably outside), and you shouldn't touch the surfaces that you spray with bare skin until it is completely dried.
Here's one permethrin product
Permethrin Insect Repellent for Clothing Gear and Tents
For use on clothing, tents, sleeping bags, and other outdoor gear, Sawyer Permethrin is more than just an insect repellent — it actually kills ticks, mosquitoes, spiders, chiggers, mites, and more than 55 other kinds of insects. Permethrin is also effective against the Yellow Fever Mosquito...sawyer.com
Insect repellant sprays & lotions containing DEET are readily available in Supermarkets in Spain. The Mercadona chains own label product is recommended on several ex-pat forums. Presumably it'll work on pilgrims too.Can you Buy DEET at places along Camino Francés ?
Hate to bust your bubble, but permethrin does not repel bed bugs. It kills them, but it can take 12 hours or more of exposure before they die. https://www.mdpi.com/2075-4450/4/2/230
Or to the next albergue!And like Trecile, I do not want to carry the bugs home
Hi Annie: Neither my wife nor I have ever used permethrin, and we haven't got bedbugs in an albergue. And many, many people I know have never used permethrin and have not gotten bedbugs either. So, I could just as well infer a causal relationship between NOT using permethrin and avoiding bedbugs. In fact, the only person who actually told me he got bedbugs (as opposed to a 3rd or 4th hand report of bedbugs) did use permethrin. Bottom line is that coicidence is not causality.People keep saying this. However those of us who use it don’t generally have bedbug issues so maybe it’s just the power of the word but it appears to work. If I were not chemically sensitive I would also use an insect repellent on my skin at night. And like Trecile, I do not want to carry the bugs home
For me “Lemon Eucalyptus” oil for the body has worked well for all sorts of insects. Lemon Eucalyptus is a specific species not a combination of lemon & eucalyptus.I will treat my Sleep Liner with DEET before arriving at SJPdP ... however I will need to keep refreshing it as I travel for 40 days.
Can you Buy DEET at places along Camino Francés ?
Peer reviewed and frequently misquoted: "Furthermore, significantly fewer bed bugs successfully fed to repletion through ActiveGuard fabric than through blank fabric for the five populations. With just 30 min of feeding exposure, mortality ranged from 4% to 83%, depending upon the bed bug strain. These laboratory studies indicate that ActiveGuard liners adversely affected bed bugs from diverse populations."The journal I cited above is not of the "people say" variety. It's a peer-reviewed university-published scientific journal, which I found on the website of the National Institute of Health.
Never mind Bed Bugs I think I'd be repelled by a Bunk mate who stank of Lemons, Cough Sweets, Vanilla and Alcohol or chip fryers.
So, in a spirit of sharing, here is my sure-fire solution. Drink 4 ounces of Orujo and you really won't care anymore.
Hi Annie: Neither my wife nor I have ever used permethrin, and we haven't got bedbugs in an albergue. And many, many people I know have never used permethrin and have not gotten bedbugs either. So, I could just as well infer a causal relationship between NOT using permethrin and avoiding bedbugs. In fact, the only person who actually told me he got bedbugs (as opposed to a 3rd or 4th hand report of bedbugs) did use permethrin. Bottom line is that coicidence is not causality.
The journal I cited above is not of the "people say" variety. It's a peer-reviewed university-published scientific journal, which I found on the website of the National Institute of Health
Or to the next albergue!
The study in question was funded by the makers of the treated fabric. That was clearly stated. The conclusions were that the fabric is "not repellent" but that the treated fabric slowed bed bugs in movement and feeding, and killed some if they were continuously exposed to the fabric.I can have no confidence in peer-reviewed journals unless I know who paid for the research.
Yes. I hadn’t read the paper. Still haven’t. But I did see this:The study in question was funded by the makers of the treated fabric. That was clearly stated. The conclusions were that the fabric is "not repellent" but that the treated fabric slowed bed bugs in movement and feeding, and killed some if they were continuously exposed to the fabric.