If anyone has an effective way of ridding fleas from cats without "killing" the fleas; i.e., effective repellant, sterilizing, etc., I would appreciate the references!
Thank you

There may be a very good reason for that. Best google "Program."no mike wrote:I have been using a generic version of "Program" that sterilizes fleas and effectively gets rid of them in my home. Now the name brand and generic versions are no longer available on Amazon. I found some on e-Bay but not available from US suppliers or mainstream retail.
After my daughter volunteered at the shelter I agreed to let her adopt a cat. A year later we went back and got it a friend.SarathW wrote:Do not have pets instead help to protect wild life.
I had done that but nothing turned up.tiltbillings wrote:There may be a very good reason for that. Best google "Program."no mike wrote:I have been using a generic version of "Program" that sterilizes fleas and effectively gets rid of them in my home. Now the name brand and generic versions are no longer available on Amazon. I found some on e-Bay but not available from US suppliers or mainstream retail.
I just googled "program flea control" and it looks to be available in the US.no mike wrote:I have been using a generic version of "Program" that sterilizes fleas and effectively gets rid of them in my home. Now the name brand and generic versions are no longer available on Amazon. I found some on e-Bay but not available from US suppliers or mainstream retail.
If anyone has an effective way of ridding fleas from cats without "killing" the fleas; i.e., effective repellant, sterilizing, etc., I would appreciate the references!
Thank you
Program, along with any other products containing Lufenuron, have been banned in Iceland and Sweden for the last ten years, and throughout the European Union for the last six years. The active ingredient is lethal to zooplankton.no mike wrote:Are you aware of a recall, etc.?
I'm afraid there's no solution at present. If one is going to keep cats then one just has to bite the bullet and accept the necessity of compromising either on ahiṃsā or on one's pets' health. Even the product you've been using up to now isn't fully ahiṃsā-compatible: Lufenuron may not kill the adult fleas but it does kill their larvae.As silly as it all sounds, this is an important matter to me. Not sure if there is a solution, but I don't like seeing these cats suffer.
Luckily I'm not faced with this dilemma. I live at the summit of a cold mountain where there aren't any fleas to speak of and the only bugs that afflict our cats and dogs are blood-sucking ticks and leeches. These are large enough that they can be manually removed without harming them.SarathW wrote:Bhante how do you handle this problem?
I understand you look after many homeless cats.
My wife said: 'ask him: "How do you ever catch them? They jump!" 'Ben wrote:One of the benefits of a hairless cat is that they don't normally attract flees. When they do, they can be seen easily and removed without harming them.