Hunting clothes, Mango Worms, and need to iron clothes after line drying. Is the new non cotton hunting apparel going to give you Mango Worms?

Mark, I’d also be surprised if visitors took this home.

I think infested is a strong word. They do occur. I meant to type Northern KZN, Mpumalanga and Limpopo in my previous post. Sorry for the confusion.

I quickly asked my secretary to look at the billing program, and 12 cases come up so far since October 2022. That is the Empangeni area in Zululand. I’m good friends with our local vet and will ask his stats as well
 
I sprayed all my hunting clothes with Sawyer Permethrin spray before leaving home. My wife and I didn’t have any issues.

 
After a dozen years on this site and plenty of other souces of information about African hunting aside from here I can honestly say I have read exactly one story of someone being infected with a mango/bot/warble fly larva. This one. He got it as a kid under just the right (or wrong) circumstances during the wetter summer months. Should I be aware? Sure. Am I losing much sleep over it? Nope.

Weighing the odds I'm going to be far more concerned and cautious about ticks, checking myself and clothing periodically.

You want to see a crazy bot larva infestation you should see the dozens, if not hundreds of welts I've seen on a caribou hide in August. The bot fly in the arctic infect them in the summer and drop off mid to later summer.
 
My wife spent her first 25 years in Africa. She is from an affluent family which had a access to better medical care than more Africans regardless of race. She lost her three older adult sisters to African diseases and medical misdiagnoses. It may be rare but African shtt can kill you!

Knowing this, I will wear all cotton and not tempt fate.
 
I sprayed all my hunting clothes with Sawyer Permethrin spray before leaving home. My wife and I didn’t have any issues.

Check this stuff out...
https://www.amazon.com/FMC-Dragnet-SFR-Insecticide-quart/dp/B00GLER95S/ref=sr_1_4?crid=RB6C0MHWU5OK&keywords=permethrin+sfr+36.8+concentrate&qid=1677409727&sprefix=Permethrin+SFR+36.8%,aps,52&sr=8-4

Sawyer is 0.5% permethrin and cost about $15/quart, this stuff is 36.8% permethrin and cost $43/quart that you dilute down to 0.5%. Save quite a bit of money.

Best method I've found is to mix up a gallon of 0.5%. Place your clothes in a large zip top bag. Add just enough of the mix to get your clothes wet. Force the air out of the bag, seal it and work in the mix to the clothes. Let them sit overnight. Remove from the bag and hang dry (but not in the sun). The best part is not inhaling the mist from the trigger spray.

Getting ready to do this now for turkey season hunting.
 

Attachments

  • Screen Shot 2023-02-27 at 7.58.12 AM.png
    Screen Shot 2023-02-27 at 7.58.12 AM.png
    922 KB · Views: 44
Last edited:
I sprayed all my hunting clothes with Sawyer Permethrin spray before leaving home. My wife and I didn’t have any issues.

If possible, once cloths are clean, rewash with just water and permethrin. Much better protection. And where available nothing beats DEET
 
Humorous pattern on AH:

1.) I don’t want cotton safari clothes, I want what I want.

2.) I bought synthetic plastic hunting clothes

3.) The hospitality team on safari ironed them!

<insert picture of hunter wearing plastic shrinky-dink>
 
The odds are infinitesimal but never wear synthetic clothes on an airplane. Second on the permethrin. Buy it at a farm supply store like Tractor Supply, fill a bucket with the mix, soak them and hunt worry free.
 
Last edited:
Or just hunt where there aren’t mango worms-your ph will happily advise you-
 
The odds are infinitesimal but never wear synthetic clothes on an airplane. Second on the permethrin. Buy it at a farm supply store like Tractor Supply, fill a bucket with the mix, soak them and hunt worry free.
Why shouldn’t you wear synthetics on a plane? Aside from a fire risk melting them to your skin. But in all honesty, chances are if I’m in that situation, clothes melted to me would be my least concern.
 
Why shouldn’t you wear synthetics on a plane? Aside from a fire risk melting them to your skin. But in all honesty, chances are if I’m in that situation, clothes melted to me would be my least concern.
Melting to your skin is the answer. With the lithium battery's problems on aircraft, one never knows when the guy sitting next to you has a Samsung igniting and on fire while you're asleep. As I said, the odds are infinitesimal but after flying a bug smasher for twenty years, cotton was all I wore. YMMV.
 
Melting to your skin is the answer. With the lithium battery's problems on aircraft, one never knows when the guy sitting next to you has a Samsung igniting and on fire while you're asleep. As I said, the odds are infinitesimal but after flying a bug smasher for twenty years, cotton was all I wore. YMMV.

Wasn’t even considering a small battery fire.

You never know what’ll happen!
 

Forum statistics

Threads
59,436
Messages
1,289,535
Members
107,870
Latest member
UGTDelilah
 

 

 

Latest posts

Latest profile posts

Currently doing a load development on a .404 Jeffrey... it's always surprising to load .423 caliber bullets into a .404 caliber rifle. But we love it when we get 400 Gr North Fork SS bullets to 2300 FPS, those should hammer down on buffalo. Next up are the Cutting Edge solids and then Raptors... load 200 rounds of ammo for the customer and on to the next gun!
To much to political shit, to little Africa :-)
Spending a few years hunting out west then back to Africa!
mebawana wrote on MB_GP42's profile.
Hello. If you haven't already sold this rifle then I will purchase. Please advise. Thank you.
jbirdwell wrote on uplander01's profile.
I doubt you are interested in any trades but I was getting ready to list a Sauer 404 3 barrel set in the 10-12 price range if your interested. It has the 404J, 30-06 and 6.5 Creedmoor barrel. Only the 30-06 had been shot and it has 7 rounds through it as I was working on breaking the barrel in. It also has both the synthetic thumbhole stock and somewhere between grade 3-5 non thumbhole stock

Jaye Birdwell
 
Top