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Here are some valuable home remedies for dogs and cats that can keep your pet happy and healthy. From getting rid of fleas to caring for dry skin, these tips will keep dogs’ tails wagging and cats purring.
Home Remedies for Fleas
Use these home remedies to get rid of fleas on pets and in the home.
Remember: He that lieth down with dogs shall rise up with fleas.
Place a flea collar in your vacuum cleaner bag. Any fleas you suck up will remain in there.
If you don’t want to use a flea collar with insecticides, active ingredients such as lemongrass, rosemary, and marigold won’t exterminate fleas but will deter them.
Give your dog a flea bath with a flea shampoo and flea-comb him thoroughly while he’s in the water so the fleas drown.
As a flea deterrent, try adding a teaspoon of vinegar to each quart of the animal’s drinking water. It helps keep pets free of fleas and ticks but is not harmful to the pet itself. Learn about the other helpful household uses for vinegar.
Sprinkle borate powder into crevices of couches and chairs.
Stock your yard with off-leaf larvae-eating nematodes (available at pet and garden stores). Nematodes will also help to bring down your Japanese beetle population.
Proper nutrition for pets is the best flea prevention. Add brewer’s yeast to your pet’s food, as well as essential fatty acids such as omega-3 and omega-6. Check out these tips for proper pet nutrition.
Spray your windows and door screens with distilled water containing several drops of bitter orange essential oil. Fleas hate the citrus scent and will avoid crawling in through the screens.
Put uncooked oatmeal or rolled oats into a sock or nylon stocking and run a tubful of warm water over it. Soak your dog (cats will rarely let you do this) in the water for 5 to 10 minutes. Oatmeal-based shampoos are also available at pet stores. Find out more about oatmeal’s soothing benefits.
Aggravated skin sores, also known as hot spots, can make your pet miserable. If you see a hot spot developing, clip about 1/2 to 1 inch around the sore to prevent hair and other dirt from further aggravating it. Clean the sore with warm water, and after it dries, spray the area with cortisone cream. Do this twice a day until the sore starts to dry out or a scab begins to form.
Home Treatment for Cuts, Scrapes, Abrasions
Mix together 1 pint of water, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and 1/2 teaspoon calendula tincture.
Soak an injured paw in the solution. If the wound is on the body, put the solution in a squirt bottle or large syringe and gently apply it to the injured area.
Repeat the soaking or application every 4 to 6 hours for the first 24 hours.
Home Treatment for Bites and Scratches
For serious bites and scratches, take your pet to the vet.
For smaller wounds:
Rinse out fresh wounds and punctures with large amounts of this solution: 1 pint water, 1/2 teaspoon salt, and 1/2 teaspoon Echinacea/goldenseal tincture.
Cat wounds are notorious for forming abscesses. If the abscess is draining, clean it with Echinacea/goldenseal solution. Always wear latex gloves while handling an abscess.
What to Do If a Pet Is Choking
You can perform the Heimlich maneuver on animals.
Lift a small pet, or reach over the back of a large one and raise the back legs so the rear end is elevated over the head.
Place your hands around the lowest part of the chest and give a quick, gentle thrust inward and upward.
Remember to scale the force of your thrust to the size of your pet. For small pets, imagine you are performing this on an infant or toddler.
Pet Indigestion or Loose Stool
When your dog scavenges something from the compost pile, it irritates the bowel, creating nerve impulses that signal the gut to speed up. When food moves too quickly through the gut, the result is loose stools. In dogs and cats with chronic inflammatory bowel disease, the gut responds as if irritated at the slightest stress or change of diet.
The herb slippery elm, available as powder or capsules, coats the lining of the gastrointestinal tract, counteracting the irritation and allowing stools to firm up. Put 1 tablespoon of the powder (break open capsules) into 1 pint of water and bring to a boil to thicken. Let it cool, and administer by mouth. Give a teaspoon or less to small pets and several tablespoons to large dogs every 2 to 4 hours until the gut settles down (usually 8 to 24 hours).
For dogs, comb the burrs in their fur with a metal comb immediately. If burrs are badly tangled, rub vegetable oil on your fingers and work the lubrication slowly through the fur until you can pull the burrs out.
Cats typically will want to take care of their own grooming, but you can help by gently working through the mess with a wire brush. Most cats won’t let you cut their fur or lubricate it the way a dog will. (We suggest wearing long sleeves… Maybe even two layers.)
Remedies for Itchy Ears
The contents of a vitamin E capsule can soothe red or inflamed areas of the ear.
A gentle cleaning with a cotton swab or gauze dipped into vegetable oil can help to remove a buildup of wax and dirt.
Remember that dog and cat ear canals take a right-angle turn at the base of the ear, so be careful not to jam anything deep into the ear canal.
Home Remedies for Sore or Runny Eyes
A simple rinse of saline solution can help mild eye irritation. Continue using eye drops every 4 hours until clear.
If symptoms persist, consult with your vet.
How to Ease Pet Arthritis
Massage helps to relieve muscle tension that contributes to pain. Be gentle. Start from the center of the body and work your way outward. If feet are too sensitive, leave them alone.
Nutritional research suggests that supplements containing chondroitin sulfate and glycosaminoglycans can help inflamed or damaged joints. Check with your vet or health-food store.
Egg-crate foam and other creature comforts can bring relief to older and arthritic pets. Buy enough foam for two or three beds, cover the foam with washable covers (easy to make from old towels), and put them in the places your pet likes to sleep.
Bathe your dog in a mixture of 1 quart hydrogen peroxide, 1/4 cup baking soda, and 1 teaspoon liquid soap. Work the solution into the fur (avoiding the eyes), then rinse.
To rid the stench from your pet, douse him with tomato juice, leaving it on for several minutes before rinsing it off. For a large dog, a single washing can require several cans of tomato juice. You may have to repeat the procedure, but the odor will eventually work itself out of your pet’s coat.
Note:The Old Farmer’s ÃÛÌÒÁµÈË does not have professional vets on staff, so please do not inquire about serious pet health issues on this page. Contact a vet immediately if your pet develops serious symptoms, such as trouble breathing, urinating, or moving, or if s/he shows signs of shaking or weakness, seizures, confusion, fever, vomiting (unless it’s a hairball), swelling, deep wounds, bleeding in urine or poop, or other ailments that may indicate that the pet requires prompt attention. If your vet office is not open during an emergency, there are 24-hour veterinary hospitals you can call for advice; check with your vet beforehand to get the number of one, or search online. If your financial resources are limited, your vet may be able to work with you to develop a payment plan. There are also other options for financial assistance, including pet insurance (for future ailments); for advice, consult a local animal shelter or local branch of an animal welfare association, such as .
What are some of your favorite home remedies for your pets?
Catherine Boeckmann loves nature, stargazing, and gardening so it’s not surprising that she and The Old Farmer’s ÃÛÌÒÁµÈË found each other. She leads digital content for the ÃÛÌÒÁµÈË website, and is also a certified master gardener in the state of Indiana. Read More from Catherine Boeckmann
I tried everything on my dogs chapped dried out nose and nothing worked. I then tried O'Keefe's working Hands hand cream. After about a week it started to clear up. After a month it was as good as new. that stuff worked like a charm.
Forgot to mention -- haven't had to deal with skink spray, but have had dogs who loved to roll in decomposing little corpses. Dr Bronner's peppermint soap works like a charm to get rid of that horrendous odor.
If a cat has fluid in its ear, it can be a sign of several things, such as an ear infection caused by bacteria or fungus. Sometimes an infection can be caused by ear mites (signs of which can be dark crusty or waxy material inside the ear, sort of like coffee grounds; cat prone to shaking or scratching its head). There are remedies available at pet stores for mild ear mite infestations, but if your cat has a severe infestation, or if you suspect something else is causing the fluid, such as a bacterial or fungal infection, it is best and safest for your pet to consult a veterinarian. Hope your cat feels better soon!
Thank you for this article. I've been treating the easy stuff for years using the methods you've mentioned with great success. I had a Maine Coon cat that would get awful colds. His whole ruff would get stiff from the mucus. I took him to a vet several times thru the year but at $125-$150 a crack it was getting quite expensive. I've always treated myself and my two-legged kids with echinacea at the first sign of the sniffles and it would usually stop a cold dead in it's tracks.Well, It worked on Er-so-bad (Guess how he got his Maine Coonie name! I used the liquid from Nature's Way with a 1:4 extract. I wouldn't use it on a kitten under 6 mos old.) Start with .25ml (dropper is marked). You can wash it down with a little water but DO NOT force it down the throat. You don't want the cat to choke or aspirate the fluid into it's lungs. My cats produced alot of saliva, almost like a light foaming. If they keep it down you should see a marked improvement the next day. Even if some comes back up, they are still getting some of the benefits. Keep it up for at least a week. Oh while I'm on this, I have been told to NEVER give a cat any aspirin product EVER because it is FATAL!
My cat has what seems to be little scabs down his back, there hair along the spine area is also thinned. He doesn't have fleas and i don't notice any biting or scratching of the area.
Awww. Scabs can be the cause of a number of issues: food allergies, ring worm, and others. We would suggest you take the kitty to the vet to be sure to treat the right issue.
I found your site very and booked marked it for the future. Thank you so much! I seen several of your readers have a hard time like many of us do pay for a costly vet bill so I hope to help. I worked at a vet office at one time and 99% of vet offices take a credit card called " care credit " and it can be used for people too it low rate and fairly easy to get approved for! I hope it helps some of your fur babies if you have no choice but to go to vet. God bless! :-)