Patches
Well-Known Member
Actually, that's a bit of an over exaggeration as it's listed in the ingredients when you check.
I bought Lincoln Tea Tree Oil Fly spary for Patches. As it stated it was Tea Tree Oil, it never occured to me to wonder whether it had DEET in it. I used a test patch on Patches and she was fine with it.
The next day I liberally sprayed her in it. By the next morning she had what I assumed to be HUGE bite marks all down her sides and across her withers. She was bothered by them when I touched them too. I was puzzled as to what had bitten her, when she's never suffered like that before.
I did question it in my mind though, thankfully, and stopped using the fly spray (just in case) after checking the ingredients and it saying it contains N-Diethyl-meta-toluamide. I wondered if DEET might be the abbreviation for it (have googled and I'm correct). So for two days she had no fly spray and yet wasn't bitten at all.
I don't understand why the didn't label it as a Deet product, as most other manufacturers think it's great to say "contains DEET". I wouldn't have used it had I known it contained DEET as I've heard reports of many horses being sensitive. Even if I'd checked the label in the shop before purchase, I wouldn't have automatically wondered if that was DEET, it was only after she had problems that I mused about it.
I now know that Patches is one of the many horses sensitive to DEET and have binned the fly spray and reverted to the one I used to use.
I bought Lincoln Tea Tree Oil Fly spary for Patches. As it stated it was Tea Tree Oil, it never occured to me to wonder whether it had DEET in it. I used a test patch on Patches and she was fine with it.
The next day I liberally sprayed her in it. By the next morning she had what I assumed to be HUGE bite marks all down her sides and across her withers. She was bothered by them when I touched them too. I was puzzled as to what had bitten her, when she's never suffered like that before.
I did question it in my mind though, thankfully, and stopped using the fly spray (just in case) after checking the ingredients and it saying it contains N-Diethyl-meta-toluamide. I wondered if DEET might be the abbreviation for it (have googled and I'm correct). So for two days she had no fly spray and yet wasn't bitten at all.
I don't understand why the didn't label it as a Deet product, as most other manufacturers think it's great to say "contains DEET". I wouldn't have used it had I known it contained DEET as I've heard reports of many horses being sensitive. Even if I'd checked the label in the shop before purchase, I wouldn't have automatically wondered if that was DEET, it was only after she had problems that I mused about it.
I now know that Patches is one of the many horses sensitive to DEET and have binned the fly spray and reverted to the one I used to use.