June 25, 2008

Poison Ivy - Identification, Prevention, Remedies, And Treatment

I remember I was on a camping trip a couple years ago, and me and a couple friends just couldn’t resist seeing if we could climb up the side of a rather steep hill… in the dark.

Safety be damned, we were gonna give it a try. Besides, we knew the river below would kind sorta break our fall if we fell.

After a series of broken vines and the ground below us giving way, two of us did manage to make it to the top of this hill. And what was our reward for such a feat… a nice case of poison ivy.

Since it was dark out we had no idea what the heck we were climbing through.

And I have to say the rest of the trip from that point on was less than great.

So I thought today I’d spend a little time talking about poison ivy prevention, and what to do if you are unfortunate enough to get it.

Identification

The easiest way to prevent poison ivy is to know what the heck it looks like.

Here’s a pic:

poison ivy

It’s a woody shrub or vine and it commonly grows on roadsides, along trails, and can even be found climbing walls, trees or fences.

The poison ivy plant is easy to confuse with other plants, so here are it’s defining characteristics:

• Three divided leaves
• White berries on stem
• Leaves alternate on stem
• Center Leaflet on a longer stalk


Getting Poison Ivy

If you want to get poison ivy, it’s not hard at all. Just go touch the plant or touch something or someone else who’s been playing in it. It can even stay on clothes for a while so if you do get poison ivy, make sure you quarantine the clothes you were wearing so you don’t spread it to someone else or give yourself even more.

Bonus: Would you like a one way trip to the emergency room. That’s easy. Just rub a little sap in a scratch or wound and you’ll have yourself a one way ticket in no time.

Immunity

Just like some people are immune to mosquito bites, there are a few rare folks that are actually immune to poison ivy. Growing up I had a friend who was, and as I’ve already mentioned, I am not. I was jealous. So if you’re with someone and only one of you develops a rash even after being exposed to the same plant, it doesn’t rule out poison ivy since the other person may have an immunity to the nasty stuff (lucky duck).

Once You’ve Been Exposed

If you’ve been exposed to poison ivy, you can minimize the effects and sometimes even get rid of it before the rash starts, but that means you have to know you’ve touched the stuff so being able to identify it is important.

One thing you don’t want to do is take a shower or put any hot water on it. Hot water helps open up your pores and lets the oil from the plant into your body – that’s bad – we’re trying to avoid that. And showering is also bad so don’t do that as it can actually spread it all over your body.

You can either rinse the exposed areas with a lot of cold water or you can use alcohol to try to remove the poison ivy oil, but after about a half our or so, you’re too late, and you’re just gonna have to live with it.

Once the itching starts

If it’s a serious case, go to a doctor. However, most of the time it’s not life threatening, just incredibly annoying. Here’s a couple things you can try to help make the itching subside. If you have access to hot showers go take a shower in the hottest water you can stand for as long as you can stand it. It’ll help the itching go away for about 8 hours.

If you or anyone has spray deodorant containing aluminum (nearly all do), then spray that on the affected areas.

And if you know your weeds well, you can mash up some jewelweed and apply it to the rash. Here’s what it looks like:

Jewelweed

What you’ll endure

The symptoms vary in severity depending on exposure. Sometimes it’s quite severe, but most of the time you’re just going to end up with a very itchy rash that will last from a week to three weeks.

And if you do get it, here are a couple products you can use to help your poison ivy go away faster (trust me, they’re so worth it):

Buji
Corticool
Zanafel

I’d actually recommend keeping one of these products in with your camping supplies just in case. It’ll make sure your camping trip isn’t ruined if you do manage to get a case of poison ivy.

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