[pct-l] Permethrin
Ken Murray
kmurray at pol.net
Mon Feb 13 10:48:17 CST 2012
I was wondering about the 3M Ultrathon repellant does it actually last as long as they say? Can you give us a procedure on how you process your cloths with permethrin?
Why not use a 13% concentration, how long to soak, do you rinse after, does the make up of the cloth matter, etc.?
Thanks, Jim
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Jim, I've used Permethrin on my clothes working on trail crews for the last ten years. YES, it actually works as well as advertised! I generally treat my clothing at the beginning of summer, once, and that does it for the year.
The key I find, is to get the clothing SOAKING wet, not just misted.
The standard for this is the product made by Sawyer, which is 0.5%. I have found and used a cheap product at the 99-only store, which was a lower concentration, but it didn't seem to matter, as long as I soaked the clothing. The type of cloth does not seem to matter. You do not need to rinse after. I apply by putting my shirt on a hanger, then using the spray to saturate those areas I want covered, leave until dry. I've also used a plastic bag, and dumped a couple spray bottles worth in with my shirt, mixed well, and hung to dry.
I have not seen Permethrin available in concentrations higher than 1%, like Jerry mentions, except for other uses. I'd be cautious about higher concentrations. The general rule is that almost anything can be irritating if in a high enough concentration. I'd use what works and is recommended, and not go higher.
Here is the MSDA sheet for Sawyer Permethrin: http://www.sawyer.com/msds/MSDS%20SP649%2012oz%20S-PTR-02.pdf
Occasionally, people ask about safety. Permethrin 1% is the treatment for lice in children. We coat their entire body with the stuff, and leave it for 8 hours. Reactions are virtually unheard of.
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