Never seen a tick?

I remember my dad taking them off the dogs with petrol when I was a lad. Our cats here generally get a few every year, the dogs occasionally, the technique is to grab them as close to the skin as possible (nails help), twist them clockwise and when you get to about a 1/4 of a turn give them a sharp pull. If you pull them straight off it can leave bits of them behind... My mate here lives further out in the sticks and it must be tick central out there because I've seen her pull 5 or 6 off her cat while we've been sitting having a chat. She's had 2 herself

I guess it's only a matter of time...
Fleas don't seem to be much of a problem. Occasionally I see one on a cat but that's about all. I'll never forget one of the houses I looked at when I was first here in 2004, it had stood empty for about 10 years and was starting to fall to pieces. Cats had got in and had been living in it, and dying in it. We looked around the house with some kind of horrified fascination until we realised we were being eaten alive by fleas, which is when we left in something of a rush. It was a while before I felt clean again.
I'd like to know what injection can keep fleas & ticks off a cat for a year, my mate the vet has tried loads of different things - injections, drops, stuff you put on their food, but the only one that works effectively is Frontline, which is drops you put on their necks, it covers fleas for 3 months and ticks for one but it's expensive so we generally wait for the dogs to start scratching like loons or a tick or a flea to appear on one of the cats.
We get the occasional mouse in here, either the cats bring them in or they come in through an open window. Anyway the cats are useless at catching them once inside the house so it's up to muggins again. I've fly swatted a few but the most effective way of catching them seems to be mouse glue - I kid you not! You get a bit of cardboard, say about 6" square, put a lump of food in the middle (cheese, meat, whatever) and put a circle of this runny glue around it. Then you stick it out of the way, under the cupboards or behind a chair (there's one behind my couch right now but I think one of the cats must have actually caught it again for once) The mouse goes for the food, walks through the glue and gets stuck to it. The more they struggle the more they get stuck. They usually panic and start screaming, then all you do, well, all I do, is fold the cardboard in half, drop a brick on it & pop it in the bin. What, you want me to use poison?
The dogs occasionally present us with a dead (and slightly chewed) rat.
It's funny you're using ant powder on earwigs, I once used woodworm fluid on hornets - they had a nest on one of my window shutter boxes and I could hear them trying to chew through the wood to get into the house. So I figured an insect was an insect, got a spray can with a tube for spraying into woodworm flight holes, drilled a small hole into the box and sprayed it in there. After a few "applications" the noise died down. The next year I was up cleaning the gutters out and I saw they'd tried to make another nest on the outside of the window, using the easiest available building material - dead hornets.
What was it you were worrying about again?
