Does anyone carry a little mirror for checking for ticks in those hard to see spots?
Or is that over kill...
Does anyone carry a little mirror for checking for ticks in those hard to see spots?
Or is that over kill...
Tick Check! sounds like a good trail name for somebody.
A mirror would also have other uses.
Are deer ticks so small that you can't feel them with your fingers? I'm not positive I've ever seen one. More familiar with the basic dog/wood tick.
" Of all the paths you take in life, make sure a few of them are dirt. "
If you carry a digital camera or a cell phone, you can snap a photo, and zoom in.
For a couple of bucks, get a weird haircut and waste your life away Bryan Adams....
Hammock hangs are where you go into the woods to meet men you've only known on the internet so you can sit around a campfire to swap sewing tips and recipes. - sargevining on HF
Since you ask, here are the two I pulled off my dog while I was reading this thread.image.jpg
Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
Unfortunately the buggers are fairly small. I've used the cell phone camera trick several times. Just remember to delete the photos of possibly the nether regions!!! It quite be embarrassing for it to be accidently sent to coworkers, grandma, clergy, your boss, etc.
Tick nymphs can be quite smallLike a spec of dirt, sometimes almost colorless.
img-tickbasics1.jpg
Last edited by MuddyWaters; 03-11-2016 at 05:39.
Wow. That is super tiny. I have seen the two biggest ones, and possible the third one that I thought was just a baby, but I know I have never seen that smallest little speck of one. How in the world would you see that in your hair or on your socks mixed up with all the trail dust and dirt? Scary that that little bugger can cause you so much harm and blends in so well.
" Of all the paths you take in life, make sure a few of them are dirt. "
That's why most people who get Lyme never see the tick that gave it to them. You should also be looking for a rash like this which is caused by the Lyme bacteria spreading out from the site of the tick bite.
lymedisease1.jpeg
If you don't stand for something, you will fall for anything.
I will add that if you ever have flu like symptoms accompanied by joint aches (particularly when it isn't flu season) these are common symptoms of lyme disease. If this happens, get to a doctor and get a Lyme test. I've had an active case more than once and a bullseye rash was not present either time.
Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.
Of course! Daily tick checks are mandatory. Anyone who doesn't do it has just never known anyone with Lyme. My nephew will have Lymes for his entire lifetime because it went diagnosed for 6 months. It ended his college football career and turned a natural athlete into a near invalid -- for life.
A plastic emergency spotting mirror from REI weighs about half an ounce. You can afford to carry half an ounce to defend yourself against the most dangerous wild animal on the AT.
Maine has a HUGE tick issue in the last seven years or more. I mean huge. Yet the critters are extremely tiny. My brother (a Maine outdoorsman theorizes they came up with the turkeys. I dont get the connection though.) As a female it is very tempting to cut my hair uber short. I mean...its like looking for crabs. NOT THAT I have had..never mind...LOL
If you suspect Lyme and the test comes back negative, insist on a second test. There are also two kinds of tests, one takes longer but is slightly more reliable. I knew I had Lyme and talked the doc into prescribing the antibiotics, then the results came back negative. I kept taking the meds and they did a second test which came back positive. I know exactly which tick did me in (botched removal by my son) and I never got the bullseye rash. I caught it very early and it still kicked my butt for a couple of months, including "lyme arthritis" in my shoulder. Hand, wrist, fingers and elbow all fine, but moving my shoulder was agony.
There is also evidence of a direct correlation between the density of deer ticks in an area and the presence of certain invasive plants, particularly Japanese Barberry. The though is that Barberry provides an ideal habitat for both ticks and for mice which are one of their main carriers. On a fun sidenote, Lyme Connecticut, the town for which the disease was named has a huge Barberry problem.
Colorless green ideas sleep furiously.