Rainer
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 4, 2016
- Messages
- 752
A place I was going to spend a week deer hunting is covered in them. I walked in 4k and had 19 0f them on my legs.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I presume you are vaxed for COVID? You have already demonstrated a weak immune system if you reacted badly to babesiosis which puts you in high risk for serious COVID reaction. I'm sure I'm not telling you anything you don't know but want to be sure. Did you eventually kick Lyme or still dealing with residual effects?My level of prevention is really all dependent upon where I’m recreating. If you look at CDC’s Lyme map the North East and Upper Midwest have it bad. The NE ticks also transmit a red blood cell parasite called babesiosis which was a doozy for me in conjunction with Lyme.
There’s this relatively new thing called Heartland Virus that a colleague lost a dog to in Arkansas (or at least they believe that was the case). That’s one to put on the radar.
Ticks sure do suck. Har har.
Though the Bitterroots were the birthplace of Rocky Mountain Spotted fever (hence the National Lab in Hamilton), there’s not really a prevalence of tick borne illnesses in the northern Rockies at all these days. I don’t really give them a second thought in Montana.
Permethrin clothing is key, but deet is also part of the plan - I like 3M's ultrathon spray - it is encapsulated so you don't have the harsh solvents like traditional deet products.
Great info. Thanks.The most ticks I have taken off myslf at one time was almost 50. I went hunting through a bottle neck in the brush where the deer would wait and see if all looked good to proceed forward,
A friend came to visit me last spring. He is a wildlife photograher.
He was going about mindless to ticks wearing shorts. He ignored my warnings.
I insisted that he do a strip search in my garage before coming into the house. I gave him mirrors.
One night he awoke aware that ticks were boring into him.
One was in his shoulder, another in his neck and the third in his scrotum.
I pulled two out and gave him a mirror for his privates.
After that he bought womens nylon pantyhose , wore it religiously and also nylon shirt and heagear.
I adjust where and when I go places.
After late summer i cannot find a singe tick anywhere.
Yale medical school did the most intense study about Lymes Disease. A perfecr storm of factors caused it to explode, one was lack of predators.
In Belgium research showed that stopping the hunting of small and medium predators dramtically reduced Lymes in people in rural populations.
Lymes is actually carried much more in mice and shrews than deer. Depending on the ecology of an area hunting foxes and coyotes will transfer to more people getting lymes.
For many years I lived in the totally tick free soutwestern deserts. I would cheerfully take living with rattesnakes over ticks.
My cousin almose died from babesisious.
On another side note, what is now becoming a huge disease problem in the southwest are cattle watering ponds. Mosquitos now carry Denge Fever and deady enchephalitis.
With the warming from climate change these tropical diseases will be moving north.
The absolute worst mosquito explosions I have experienced were in the Mohave Desert caused by cattle watering ponds. Ridiculous since the cattle carrying capacity was so low. But the ranchers went all over the desert with bulldozers digging out depressions to retain rainwater. Then the tropical monsoons bring rain carrying these tiny ferocious disease bearing mosquitos which lay eggs that hatch in a few days.
I was out scouting one time for a desert deer hunt and got hit with rain and the mosquito explosion. Even miles and miles away from the cattle ponds the mosquitoes were unbearable.
Nowadays digging such watering ponds would never pass environmental impact studies and would not be permitted.
Great info. Thanks.
chain sawSay you get one the embeds itself in you … what's the best way to remove?
My wife found one behind my son's ear after a day of watching the Tule Elk at Point Reyes years ago. It was smaller than the head of a pin. I would never have found it, but she would go over those kids with a magnifying glass.I moved to NM.............lol Only seen a couple since moving here.
Hate ticks. They were thick on the Central Coast CA.
Don't think I ever took a buck in CA that did NOT have ticks & fleas on them,at least a few.
Debate was let the deer lay for an hour and most would leave the critter, but by then the meat bee's would be all over you.
Thanks for asking! Yup, I got covid on “opening weekend” in NYC and it kicked my butt for a while. It was the first time I’d been sick at all in a good three years. Now that you mention it, the prior exposure to babesiosis might explain why I got so darn sick from covid. I had some oddball residual inflammatory effects for a few months after, like a wildly intense reaction to a sunburn. I got vaxxed up the day I became eligible have been feeling fine since.I presume you are vaxed for COVID? You have already demonstrated a weak immune system if you reacted badly to babesiosis which puts you in high risk for serious COVID reaction. I'm sure I'm not telling you anything you don't know but want to be sure. Did you eventually kick Lyme or still dealing with residual effects?
Not to be flippant, but I’ll take griz, lions, and moose most any day of the week.The type of tick that carries Lyme disease is on the ear of FDR. I found this one on me at my in-laws' in PA this spring. I felt it on my leg while showering. These invisible bastards scare this Montana boy more than grizzly bears.
View attachment 197679