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#697666 05/29/12 10:08 PM
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Spent all weekend, Friday, Sat, Sunday.....riding 4 wheeler in W. Virginia. Wore shorts every day. Had a blast. No ticks on me at all - and yes, I checked every evening.

So, tonight, wife and I go out to pick up litter along the "adopt a highway" route our church sponsors. Us, and another couple. 2 mile stretch of road.........which means a 4 mile walk when you get right down to it.

Wore long pants..........anyway, I've pulled 6 ticks off of me since we got back. Like an idiot - I put 3 of them down the bathroom sink........and they're crawling back out now. Instead of flushing them - or better yet, pulling them and burning them - I "washed" them down the drain. How do I kill them now?

Any help?

archbolddawg #697667 05/29/12 10:14 PM
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Pour a little bleach down the drain? That's what I'd do.

archbolddawg #697668 05/29/12 10:16 PM
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Bleach the drain.

Psydeffect #697669 05/29/12 10:16 PM
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X2. Bleach or gasoline. Obviously bleach is the better choice.


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dawglover05 #697670 05/29/12 10:19 PM
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Bleach it will be. Can't believe I was dumb enough to just pull them off and put them in the drain. Geez - I know better than that.

archbolddawg #697671 05/29/12 10:37 PM
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Keep a small bottle of rubbing alcohol with screw on cap handy during the season, drop them in there


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archbolddawg #697672 05/29/12 10:37 PM
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Hey, at least you didn't end up with a tick on your schrotum when I was five.... Could've been worse, dude!


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archbolddawg #697673 05/29/12 11:12 PM
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Spoooon!






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CaptainCheckdown #697674 05/29/12 11:14 PM
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Quote:

Hey, at least you didn't end up with a tick on your schrotum when I was five.... Could've been worse, dude!



How do you know he didn't have a tick on his . when you were 5?


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archbolddawg #697675 05/29/12 11:15 PM
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You city folk don't know nothin' do ya?


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archbolddawg #697676 05/30/12 02:52 AM
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Had a big problem with them for 3 years but developed ideas of what to avoid to avoid them mostly.
There are certain kinds of branches and groups of trees to stay out of. Wear a hat and don't brush up against tree limbs at all. Cut everything down as you go near it.

archbolddawg #697677 05/30/12 03:19 AM
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Congratulations Arch
Please do not shoot trophy

PrplPplEater #697678 05/30/12 05:00 AM
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That's what I do...spoon them until they crack.


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archbolddawg #697679 05/30/12 05:23 AM
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I would have made then watch 24 hours of C-span, then they would have just hung themselves.


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PrplPplEater #697680 05/30/12 06:40 AM
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Quote:

Spoooon!









OMG! I love the Tick! Some dude on my street dressed as him for Halloween lasqt year. I walked up and yelled SPOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOONNNNNNN! He told me I was the first to get his costume, I asked where Arthur was. He was still in another room getting his costume on. LOL!


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archbolddawg #697681 05/30/12 08:40 AM
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How did you pull them out? Isn't there a way to do it properly or something?


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AndraDavis4MVP #697682 05/30/12 08:46 AM
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I used a tweezers.

archbolddawg #697683 05/30/12 03:51 PM
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ODNR is calling for a bad season.

You can tuck a dryer sheet into your boots or socks, thats supposedly a way to stop them. Personally, I find they drop out of trees or shrubs more than crawl up.

1oldMutt #697684 05/30/12 04:56 PM
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I usually spray my yard 3 times/year for fleas and ticks, and make sure my dog is up to date on his flea and tick medicine.

I am also going to spray the new deck for ants, termites, fleas, ticks, etc.

I don't get out in the woods much right now. I don't do much that requires a lot of walking.


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1oldMutt #697685 05/30/12 05:49 PM
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Quote:

ODNR is calling for a bad season.

You can tuck a dryer sheet into your boots or socks, thats supposedly a way to stop them. Personally, I find they drop out of trees or shrubs more than crawl up.




I may try the dryer sheet thing.

The ticks I got were 100% on grass - knee high grass, alongside the road. They didn't drop off trees or branches. (actually, ticks don't do trees or branches - mainly they are on grasses or weeds, waiting for a host to walk by/brush against them).

archbolddawg #697686 05/30/12 05:51 PM
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A tick got stuck onto my dog once. I think it happened in Tombstone, Arizona. We saw it on her on the way to Phoenix/Tempe. Used tweezers to pluck it off. Grabbed as close to the mouth as I could. That's my full life experience with ticks so far.

clevesteve #697687 05/30/12 05:54 PM
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I've pulled ticks off of dogs, cats, myself, etc.............I've just never had 6 on me at the same time.

archbolddawg #697688 05/30/12 09:06 PM
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Low hanging pine boughs are full of them waitung for deer to walk through.

archbolddawg #697689 05/30/12 11:04 PM
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I'm a big believer in DEET myself. I used the high content DEET when I went hiking on the Appalacian Trail. I'd spray it on my boots and socks, as this was the stuff you didn't spray directly on your skin. I'd also spray it around the base of my tent.


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ErikInHell #697690 05/31/12 12:07 AM
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When I was a kid, we had company from out of town and they brought a stray cocker spaniel looking mutt that they found. They asked my dad to look at this 'weird growth' on it's back right where becomes the tail. They were oblivious. It was a tick that had just fed and fed the whole time they'd had the dog. It was easily as big as a grape. The legs now looked like little specks on the sides. It was sure to just fall off soon, it was so full.

Dad decided to pluck it off and just pop it between his fingers. Guess where the contents went? My chin and right cheek . . .

Scarred for life . . .

archbolddawg #697691 05/31/12 12:42 AM
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I found a couple ticks crawling on me a few weeks ago after coming back from a little morel hunting...

I had read that this is supposed to be a bad year for tick b/c of a mild winter and low white-footed mouse population.....

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Why this year's tick season will be really bad

By April Hussar
SELF.com

Picnics, hikes, afternoons in the garden -- all wonderful ways to take advantage of the warmer weather. But keep in mind that along with fresh air and exercise, you're also potentially exposing yourself to tiny, unwanted visitors -- ticks! Luckily, with a few steps, you can minimize your exposure and keep yourself safe.


According to Dr. Richard S. Ostfeld, a disease ecologist at the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies in Millbrook, N.Y., this is poised to be an especially bad tick season, because of the way the white-footed mouse population was affected by a great acorn season two years ago, and a bad acorn season this past year.

Since ticks feast on white-footed mice, and white-footed mice are very effective at transmitting Borrelia burgdorferi (the bacterium that causes Lyme disease), the infected tick population grew last year, says Dr. Ostfeld. Now, this year, fewer acorns means fewer mice, which in turn, theorizes Dr. Ostfeld, essentially means ticks will need something else to snack on. Us!

Gary P. Wormser, M.D., the chief of infectious diseases at Westchester Medical Center and a professor at New York Medical College, is familiar with Dr. Ostfeld's theory. "That, combined with the nice weather, and people being out and about enjoying the nice weather, might bring people into contact with more ticks," he says.

Ticks are less active in cold weather, Dr. Wormser explains, but they can still be active even in the winter as long as it's not freezing. "And this has been such a mild winter and spring, they're likely to be more active than they would be under colder conditions, and people are more likely to be outside," he says.

Plus, Dr. Wormser says the even years tend to be a little worse in terms of numbers of cases of Lyme disease. "I'm not sure exactly why that is," he says, noting that the deer tick has a two-year life cycle, so it's possible there are more of them around during the even years. "It's not a very scientific principle," he says, "but it's an observation!"

Whether or not there are more ticks this year than usual, it's important to protect yourself. "Prevention is the key," says Dr. Wormser, who points out that it's much easier to take a few precautions in advance than deal with Lyme disease and other tick-borne illnesses after the fact. Here are his top strategies for preventing tick bites:

1. Stay away from tall grass, bushy shrubs and areas where there's a lot of leaf litter. "Manicured lawns that are well-mowed are less risky," he says.

2. Use insect repellant on your exposed skin (other than your hands and face). Dr. Wormser recommends using repellant with DEET, because it's proven to be effective. "You can easily see a tick that's on your face or your hands," he explains.


3. After you've been outside and potentially exposed to ticks, take a shower or a bath. "If you can bathe within a couple of hours of exposure, you will reduce your changes of getting a tick bite."

4. Do a tick check! Dr. Wormser says one of the best strategies is to enlist someone's help and check your body for ticks every 24 hours during the time you are potentially exposed to ticks. "Look at your entire body to see if there are any attached ticks, and remove them," he says. "If you can remove the tick within 24 hours of it biting you, you usually don't contract any of the related diseases."

Speaking of removing ticks -- Dr. Wormer says is a misconception that you have to get every last bit of the tick out. "They do cement themselves in," he says, "and normally they would stay on your body for 3-7 days if left undisturbed." So, he says, "when you pull them out, occasionally a little bit of the mouth part will remain in, but that isn't necessarily a concern because it comes out on its own."

Once you pull out the tick with tweezers, Dr. Wormser recommends treating the area with a topical antibacterial (like Bacitracin) and observing the area for at least a month. "Typically a rash would develop 7-14 days after your remove the tick," he says, so if you have a rash right away, it's probably a reaction to the bite itself, rather than Lyme disease. In addition to watching out for a rash, you should make an appointment with your doctor if you have symptoms like headaches or fevers that don't seem to be related to a cold, says Dr. Wormser.




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Tyler_Derden #697692 05/31/12 09:09 AM
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"If you can remove the tick within 24 hours of it biting you, you usually don't contract any of the related diseases."




Hmm, like I said my experience with ticks is limited, but it seems to me that it would be tough for this to go unnoticed for over 24 hours.

clevesteve #697693 05/31/12 09:12 AM
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Quote:

Quote:

"If you can remove the tick within 24 hours of it biting you, you usually don't contract any of the related diseases."




Hmm, like I said my experience with ticks is limited, but it seems to me that it would be tough for this to go unnoticed for over 24 hours.



It depends on where you are. If you are camping where you aren't showering every day or if you have longer hair then there is a decent chance of not finding it for 24 hours... It doesn't hurt, in fact you can't really feel a tick on you at all.. so unless you see it or feel it for some other reason like washing, you would never know it was there.


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DCDAWGFAN #697694 05/31/12 09:22 AM
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Growing up all I did was play in the woods around town, and don't recall ever getting a tick on me. Wasn't until I had dogs that I became more conscious of them.


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archbolddawg #697695 06/01/12 10:46 AM
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Quote:

I used a tweezers.




I use nail polish remover & a Qtip, touch that sucker w/ it & he will draw up,pull his head out and be DEAD before you can grab the tweezers to pick 'em up.
Rubbing alcohol works too, but it's a much slower death

When you just pluck 'em alot of times you'll leave the sucker still embedded in the skin & can cause further issues.
Specially if you a hairy dog, like our 55lb sheltie.

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