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Chic Freak
15-May-2009, 12:35 PM
Does anyone have any cunning tips for treating insect bites?? I got eaten alive by midges yesterday and the itching today is driving me INSANE, I even woke up to find myself scratching in the middle of the night! They're all over me from about mid-thigh to scalp :(

I have bite cream, which is sort of taking the edge off for an hour or two at a time, but if anyone knows of any other treatments, that would be great. Seemed like the kind of random thing someone on here might know ;)

slickwilly13
15-May-2009, 01:07 PM
Midges. *L* You people have funny words for things.

My advice is prevention. Is insect repellant w/ deet easy to find over there? If so, then using a formula w/ the highest amount of deet. Such as Off! or Cutter.

For treatment, keep using the cream, but also use tablets. It gets into blood. I recommend Benadryl tablets if they are available in your area.

Midges. *L*

FoodFight
15-May-2009, 01:09 PM
I've always had good luck with Aloe Vera for skin irritation. The best results come from fresh cuttings but the prepared gels can also provide some relief.

SymphonicX
15-May-2009, 01:44 PM
I fucking GUARANTEE if you use Arnica cream of some sort it will solve the bites almost immediately - used some after being r@ped by insects in South Africa and it worked a treat

AcesandEights
15-May-2009, 02:12 PM
I've always had good luck with Aloe Vera for skin irritation. The best results come from fresh cuttings but the prepared gels can also provide some relief.

So true. I really need to pick up a plant. I've no green thumb to speak of, but having had one in the house when growing up and being able to take a raw cutting and apply it directly to a burn, bite or annoying abrasion was always great.

Chic Freak
15-May-2009, 04:16 PM
My advice is prevention. Is insect repellant w/ deet easy to find over there? If so, then using a formula w/ the highest amount of deet. Such as Off! or Cutter.

For treatment, keep using the cream, but also use tablets. It gets into blood. I recommend Benadryl tablets if they are available in your area.

Midges. *L*

midges are not funny :(

I was using "jungle formula" repellent. I didn't think to check the label and I've never heard of deet. I hope I can get it over here. So many drugs that are over the counter in the US are only available with a prescription here.

Benadryl- isn't that for hayfever?


I fucking GUARANTEE if you use Arnica cream of some sort it will solve the bites almost immediately - used some after being r@ped by insects in South Africa and it worked a treat

Thanks for the tip! I will keep an eye out for it in Superdrug. Rape is a good word. Bastard insects!!

MinionZombie
15-May-2009, 04:36 PM
Benadryl- isn't that for hayfever?

True, but it's generally an anti-histamine.

When I had an awful time with a skin allergy I kept taking my hayfever tablets throughout the autumn and winter and spring and it stopped all my itching and inflamation/welting/etc ... mind you, that was a skin allergy brought on by cheap-ass clothing dye ... which somehow linked with eating oats (which I found out about much later, not that I was ever allergic to oats ever before...weirdly).

I too have had my fair share of midgie and insect bites, the matress I had at uni in the last two years must have been skanky as I'd get these swollen bites on my arms, which went away when I left uni. Also, last year when I was filming "Signing Off", I came back covered in bites, which were initially just red blotches, but which became relatively large lumps which ITCHED LIKE BUGGERY for a few days.

Those bites were too strong for my hayfever anti-histamines though, and my anti-itch cream only (as you say) took the edge off.

What's this "Arnica" stuff, symph?

Chic Freak
15-May-2009, 05:20 PM
I too have had my fair share of midgie and insect bites, the matress I had at uni in the last two years must have been skanky as I'd get these swollen bites on my arms, which went away when I left uni.

If each bite had three puncture wounds it mean you had bedbugs. I saw it on TV :D

Think I may be getting some Benadryl when I get a chance to get down the shops!

DubiousComforts
15-May-2009, 06:20 PM
Midges. *L* You people have funny words for things.
Yeah, what are midges?

Around these parts, Midge is the name of the waitress at the 24-hour diner.
And I'm sure there is more than one of those (hence "midges").

Publius
15-May-2009, 06:30 PM
Around these parts, Midge is the name of the waitress at the 24-hour diner.
And I'm sure there is more than one of those (hence "midges").

And they're biting Chic Freak? Zombie attack! Sorry, Chic, you're a goner. We'll make sure you don't reanimate, though.

:D

slickwilly13
15-May-2009, 07:12 PM
Its a biting fly. Some people call them sand or black flies.

Chic Freak
15-May-2009, 08:02 PM
Yeah. Tiny little flies that seem really innocuous but bite like mosquitoes. I might actually take a photo of my newly diseased-looking skin and post it so you guys know I'm not just moaning about nothing. I'm surprised I have any blood left! Maybe that's why I'm so tired today.

DawnGirl27
15-May-2009, 08:10 PM
How about Calamine lotion (the pink stuff used to stop itching chicken pox)?

Yojimbo
15-May-2009, 08:22 PM
Once as a kid visiting relatives in hawaii, I went with my cousins on a hike where I got bitten on litterally every inch of exposed leg and arm skin. (I was wearing shorts as were my cousins, but had no idea that they were mosquito resistant and I was not) These bites resulted in massive, massive itching, and I actually got a fever from the number of bites.

At the time, one of my relatives concocted a remedy which involved mixing baking soda with (I think it was) hydrogen peroxide, forming it into a paste and slathering this on the bites. I recall it seemed to reduce the itching to some degree, but I do remember still being totally uncomfortable for the remainder of the trip.

krakenslayer
15-May-2009, 08:41 PM
Midges (where I live it's pronounced Midjies) are a tiny insect very common in the UK, particularly in damp rural areas, PARTICULARLY in Scotland. In the evening, the females swarm around warm blooded animals, including human beings, and bite them like mosquitoes to drink their blood. They are much smaller and their bite is not as bad as that of a mozzie, but they are far, far more common and swarm in much greater numbers than mosquitoes even in tropical areas.

darth los
15-May-2009, 08:49 PM
Midges. *L* You people have funny words for things.

My advice is prevention. Is insect repellant w/ deet easy to find over there? If so, then using a formula w/ the highest amount of deet. Such as Off! or Cutter.

For treatment, keep using the cream, but also use tablets. It gets into blood. I recommend Benadryl tablets if they are available in your area.

Midges. *L*


Dude, I had the exact same reaction when I read that word. It looks and sounds alot like minge (which requires no explanation :lol:)


Had that been the case it would have put the entire O.P. into a different context to be sure.




But anyways....carry on.









:cool:

MikePizzoff
16-May-2009, 12:37 AM
Do you guys have HORSE FLIES over in the UK? If you think midges hurt... try getting bit by a horse fly. Ho-ly-shit.

Crappingbear
16-May-2009, 02:18 AM
Calamine does work well, you just look like you bathed in Pepto Bismol.

Benadryl pills are essential as the antihistamine stops itching. They also make creams and non-greasy clear sprays so try both.

Dtothe3
16-May-2009, 03:07 AM
Do you guys have HORSE FLIES over in the UK? If you think midges hurt... try getting bit by a horse fly. Ho-ly-shit.

My mums house is located in front of a boggy field between a lake and a brooke. Mowing the lawn could easily result in 5+ bites. Those fucking bites wouldn't stop bleeding either. Horse flies were the bane of my lawn-mowing life whilke I was at home.

krakenslayer
16-May-2009, 09:59 AM
Do you guys have HORSE FLIES over in the UK? If you think midges hurt... try getting bit by a horse fly. Ho-ly-shit.

Yeah, in Scotland we call them cleggs, at least I think they're the same thing. The thing about midges is that their bites don't really hurt so much as ITCH LIKE HELL. Pain I can deal with, but a crawly, itchy feeling all over my skin on a hot, clammy summer's evening just drives me insane.

Here are the main midge species in Scotland:

C. impunctatus - The infamous Highland Biting Midge
C. heliophilus - All-day flier rather than mornings and evenings
C. newsteadii - Painful biter also known as the "beast of Arrochar"
C. nubeculosus - Often found near sheep and cattle
C. obsoletus - The garden midge. Not as painful a bite as the Highland midge, but very persistent (I think this is the main species found south of the border)

Some more information on Midges: http://www.wyrdology.com/edinburgh/midges/index.html

Chic Freak
16-May-2009, 10:22 AM
Midges (where I live it's pronounced Midjies) are a tiny insect very common in the UK, particularly in damp rural areas, PARTICULARLY in Scotland.

Oh ffs, I'm in Glasgow next week! *cries*


Do you guys have HORSE FLIES over in the UK?

Yes, but I've never been bitten by one, thankfully. Don't they just scratch you until you bleed rather than drinking blood like a mosquito?


Benadryl pills are essential as the antihistamine stops itching.

This morning I bought:


http://www.assetchemist.co.uk/images/uploads/Piriton_Allergy__.jpg

on the recommendation of my pharmacist. I had a bit of a diva moment in the chemist and asked to see "whoever's in charge" to get their advice on the most hardcore antihistamines they had available, and apparently it's these ones. The red bumps need to be gone by Tuesday morning at the absolute latest :confused:

My waxer nearly screamed when she saw my skin this morning. lol. I'm spending the rest of the day in jeans, a long sleeved poloneck and scarf to hide my hideous pox


The thing about midges is that their bites don't really hurt so much as ITCH LIKE HELL. Pain I can deal with, but a crawly, itchy feeling all over my skin on a hot, clammy summer's evening just drives me insane.

Agreed. Plus there's loads of them, I counted 73 this morning :eek: I had to get up early and take a shower this morning because the itching was driving me mad and me scratching was driving Liam mad!