Saturday, 24 March 2012

100 Percent DEET in Canada

     On the topic of DEET(N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide) insect repellent, people have widely varying opinions of the stuff.  Some regard it as liquid gold, won't leave the house without it and slather it on any chance they can get, while others won't touch it with a ten foot pole and treat it like it's nuclear waste.  Myself, I am mostly middle ground.  I try not to use it as much as possible since it is a nasty chemical, oily on your skin and it will even dissolve some plastics. I only use it when the bugs are completely insane such as Algonquin Park in June.  Luckily at least for myself, I am not affected by mosquito bites, only the pinch when they are actually biting and them buzzing around my head is annoying.  I don’t even get red bumps or itchy afterwards, let alone get a much worse blister reaction as some people do get after mosquito bites.  In my opinion citronella and all other ‘natural’ DEET-free repellents don’t do a thing for bug repellency and are just a scam plain and simple.  Last year in Algonquin I even tried some Insect Defend brand vitamin B / thiamine  patches you apply to your skin that supposedly naturally repels insects as you excrete vitamin B through perspiration, but all it did was annoyingly make my sweat smell like Alpha Bit cereal (yes seriously), and did absolutely nothing to repel mosquitos - I was still getting eaten alive like I was a piece of steak thrown to famished sled dogs after they had run the Iditerod. So that said, I certainly don’t love DEET but I will use it on occasion. 
     When I use it I would prefer to use the strongest stuff I can get.  In preparing to go to Borneo that definitely is the case.  Unlike in Canada where mosquitos don’t transfer many diseases other than West Nile, which I personally think is much overhyped, mosquitos in the tropics have the potential to transmit a whole slew of terrible diseases, some of them being incurable and don’t even have a vaccination for.   Japanese encephalitis, malaria, yellow fever, dengue fever are among some of the mosquito borne diseases and can attack either day or night.  Not only that, jungle leeches are repelled and can be removed with DEET.  So, I would like to have the strongest DEET available for the short period of time I’m going to be in Borneo.  However, Canada decided to limit DEET products for sale to 30% DEET in 2002 due to health concerns.  DEET in very rare cases has the potential to cause seizures, and there is some evidence that long term exposure to the stuff can cause insomnia, irritability and other ill effects, but again I only use the stuff when needed and for short periods of time.
     Luckily you can still get 100% DEET products in the US.  Canada has banned the sale of higher than 30% DEET in Canada but not the importation is my understanding.  So I bought a couple bottles of the Ben’s 100 (98.1% DEET) from EBay from the US – it arrived with no problems at my house.  You can only get Ben’s 30 here in Canadian stores, Muskol as well only is 30% DEET.  Just thought I would share this little trick if you are looking for the strong stuff and have no qualms about using it... sparingly.
 
Links:


Sunday, 18 March 2012

Countdown to Borneo



So I have a flight booked to Borneo and I leave in 5 weeks, I’m going to be there for 3 weeks and I am super excited.  Adventure, anyone?  In the past many years, I have been taking local-ish vacations, usually in the backcountry somewhere in Ontario.  My kayak old buddy Steve has been teaching in Malaysia (Kuala Lumpur) and a couple months ago asked me if I was interested in joining a trip he was doing to the summit of Mount Kinabalu in Borneo.  I said sure!  Mount Kinabalu is a 13,000ft mountain in North Borneo, Boneo being a large island in the South Pacific, comprised of 3 countries – Malaysia, Indonesia and a small city-state called Brunei.
            The trip to the summit of Mount Kinabalu needs to be reserved half a year in advance due to it’s popularity.  The issue being that it takes two days to make it up and back and there is limited cabin accommodations part way up on the mountain.  From the trailhead (Timophon Gate) to the summit, the trail is actually only 8 kms long, but the problem is you have to climb 2 km in that distance.  In other words it is extremely steep.  We are also doing the Via Ferrata when up there.  A Via Feratta is a semi mountain climbing thing where you are walking along the side of a rock face attached with safety harnesses, almost semi mountain climbing.
            I am super excited about the rest of Borneo.  Not to say that the Ontario backcountry is old hat, but Borneo is a very different almost alien environment and there will be lots of new things to experience.  Other than the mount Kinabalu trip taking 2 days, my schedule is free.  Borneo is an equatorial jungle island, with native .  The wildlife is amazing with orangutans, proboscis monkey, pygmy elephants, not to mention the lesser liked creatures.  Things that nightmares are made of such as flying snakes and jungle leeches that wait on branches and leaves for you to walk by and then attach themselves to you to gorge themselves on your blood expanding 2-5 times their original size.  You have to use DEET or salt to get them off.  Nice.  Some use ‘Leech socks’, sort of gaiters that the leeches can’t bite through on your calf, so you can just flick them off.
            Other than that craziness, there’s lots of other awesomeness – amazing scuba diving in Sipadan and other areas (haven’t been diving in 6 years, but great to do it again), whitewater rafting, sea kayaking, islands to camp on, huge limestone caves to visit, strange limestone pinnacles in the central region, lots of jungle trekking, and natives to visit in their long houses, hot springs and canopy walks.  Yeah, that should keep me busy for a while.
            I just bought on Osprey Waypoint 65 travel pack online after doing much research into travel packs.  It looks pretty sweet – has a zip-off daypack to use and 65 liter capacity should be more than adequate for what I am doing.

Links:
Boreno - Wikipedia
Borneo – Lonely Planet
Mout Kinabalu – Wikipedia
Sipadan – Wikipedia