Not always is the answer, unfortunately many of the products sold for household use by untrained professionals may not get rid of all the fleas in your home. If some fleas are left they will reproduce and you will end up with a flea infestation again.
Dunkeld
Dunkeld and Birnam is an area council location and also UK Census locality in Perth and also Kinross, Scotland, including 2 towns on opposite financial institutions of the River Tay: the historical cathedral "city" of Dunkeld on the north bank, and also Birnam on the south financial institution. Both were first connected by a bridge built in 1809 by Thomas Telford. Both areas lie close to the Highland Boundary Fault, which notes the geological limit between the Highlands and the Lowlands, and are regularly referred to as the "Portal to the Highlands" because of their setting on the highway and also rail lines north. Dunkeld as well as Birnam share a train station, Dunkeld & Birnam, on the Highland Main Line, and also have to do with 24 kilometres (15 mi) north of Perth on what is now the A9 road. Dunkeld pushes the eastern side of the A9 on the north financial institution of the River Tay. The town is the location of Dunkeld Cathedral. Around 20 of the houses within Dunkeld have been brought back by the National Trust for Scotland, who run a store within the town. The Hermitage, on the western side of the A9, is a countryside residential property that is likewise a National Trust for Scotland site. Birnam lies contrary Dunkeld, on the south financial institution of the Tay, to which it is connected by the Telford bridge. It is the area of the Birnam Oak, thought to the only remaining tree from the Birnam Timber named in Shakespeare's Macbeth. The Highland video games held at Birnam are the place of the World Haggis Eating Championships.