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Skitterpop 11-24-2006 07:54 AM

Tick tick tick tick
 
Fall still a time for tick trouble
By JASON KOLNOS
STAFF WRITER
Three weeks ago, David Simser dragged a white flag around the Dennis Pond Conservation woods and afterward it looked like a sesame-seed muffin.
http://www.capecodonline.com/cctimes...allstill24.jpg Simser, an entomologist with the Cape Cod Cooperative Extension, was gathering anecdotal evidence about adult deer ticks at a few locations.
Thirty minutes into this experiment, he had collected more than 300 ticks.
''It was astounding because I can't remember seeing such a quantity of ticks in one location on the Cape,'' Simser said.
As late fall gives way to winter, experts warn residents need to remain as wary when in tick habitats like woods and tall grasses as they would during warmer months to steer clear of Lyme disease and other bacterial infections carried by the insect.
Populations vary
But ticks were not teeming in every area Simser visited. While he collected about 100 of them at another conservation spot off Buck Island Road in Yarmouth, just a few were found at the Dennis Dog Park on Route 134. Likely contributing to the disparity is that the high-tick density locations Simser visited are better corridors for deer and other animals that ticks depend on for their meal tickets.
What Simser deduces from his observations is that there are pockets harboring large levels of ticks even this late in the year.
''What this says is that, if you're walking in certain areas, be prepared because you can still get dozens if not hundreds of ticks if you're not careful,'' Simser said.
It is the unusually warm 2006 autumn that has allowed the adult ticks - which are easier to be seen than the tick nymphs prevalent in the summer - to remain very active, Simser said. Since ticks are active when thermometers climb above 40 degrees, adult ticks can come out in full force during warm spells in cold months, Simser said.
Understanding the danger
Adult ticks are easier to see on clothing and skin, so they are less likely to transmit Lyme disease because people can pick them off before they have a chance to attach to the skin, Simser said. You are more likely to become infected by the smaller poppy seed-size nymphs because they are harder to see and people are most active outdoors during that part of the tick's life cycle in the late spring and early summer, he said.
Lyme disease causes flu-like symptoms and can often cause arthritic symptoms as well. If not treated, many doctors believes the illness can cause long-term neurological and other problems.
Numbers don't balance out
Even though the most active nymph stage ends with summer, holdovers may take another six months to molt into the adult phase. But nymph tick numbers appear to be down, according to the 2006 surveillance study conducted at eight Cape sites and spearheaded by Simser.
Though tick toddlers may be down, the presence of adults has been felt during a season when frost usually comes earlier than it did this year.
''Every deer we check has been infested with them and hunters are remarking on how many ticks they are finding on their dogs,'' says Andy Little, a manager at Powderhorn Outfitters in Hyannis. Little says hunters are quick to grab a $9 bottle of a powerful repellent called Duranon, which can be applied to clothes.
Help sought from hunters
Deer hunters on Martha's Vineyard, long considered a major problem area for the spread of tick-borne illnesses, will be given an additional week rather than the usual one-week shotgun season that begins Monday, according to Sam Telford III, associate professor of infectious diseases at the Tufts University School of Veterinary Medicine and a well-known Island tick researcher.
The aim is to increase the number of deer taken by hunters.
''As the deer density became greater and more spread out, it changed the habitat and brought this problem on us,'' said Telford, adding there were fewer deer on the island in the 1950s and barely any ticks.
Hope for the future
Telford said he hopes the extra week of deer taking will help reduce tick bite instances.
''This intervention work is not intended to produce immediate results this year or next,'' Telford said. ''We are doing this for our children.'' Jason Kolnos can be reached at jkolnos@capecodonline.com. (Published: November 24, 2006)

Raven 11-24-2006 08:10 AM

i hatem
 
i once put a tick in the micro wave on top of
a paper towel and gave him several minutes...
and it didnt phase it... they are like alien bugs...

a dog kennel lady i spoke to
got so infested at her place of business
that it shut her down....:mad:

justplugit 11-24-2006 08:51 AM

They are mean little bastages. :(

Backbeach Jake 11-24-2006 08:54 AM

I impale them on toothpicks and spread them around the back yard as warning to the rest. :devil: They don't bother me....

vineyardblues 11-24-2006 09:08 AM

I just called the Vet last week because of all ticks my dog gets,Asked the best way to pull them off etc, Strange because we have had several frost's up here, Cat also has them, Scary bastards.:sick:
Plus we see deer all the time in the back yard
Any how Vet said to use Med's all year round from now on.
VB

vanstaal 11-24-2006 09:31 AM

if u put garlic in the dog food and cat food it will keep the ticks away

piemma 11-24-2006 09:46 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by vanstaal (Post 436002)
if u put garlic in the dog food and cat food it will keep the ticks away

I like garlic. Will it keep them off me?

lurch 11-24-2006 11:01 AM

Thanks for the update! This is the time of year I bring the dog back in the woods for a walk.

teaser 11-24-2006 11:14 AM

I took one of my dogs to the vet for a regular check up and he found a tick by accident, he told and showed me the best way to remove them little bastages.

First get a cotton ball and soak it with alcohol.

Take the cotton ball and hold it directly on the tick for a couple of minutes.

The alcohol makes the tick back out of the place they bury their head in as it starts to suffocate them.

Then take a pair of forceps (for you older guys, the things we used to use as roach clips) and grab the tick as close to the head as possible.

Then rotate the forceps up (like pulling a nail with a hammer).

The tick will in 98% of the time let go of you're dog rather than having their head ripped off.

After you get the tick off use the cotton ball with alcohol to cleanse the wound and Fido should be fine, but watch for the tell tale signs of Lyme disease.

If you don't know what the signs are ask a vet, most common is they start to drink alot of water or become very sluggish and disoriented, if you see this get Fido to the vet quick.

Hope this helps someone, or at least makes you aware.

Swimmer 11-24-2006 11:25 AM

Ticks
 
Worse year ever. Pulled two off yesterday after dog ran around outside of garden and stopped to smell where I plant the giant pumpkins. Its almost friekin December.

average joe 11-24-2006 01:14 PM

I picked up lyme disease in early october. Didn't even notice the tick bite. Fevers, sweats, chills before i went to doctor. Was on Doxy for a month. It sucks.

Adrian 11-25-2006 10:02 AM

We have two English Springer spaniels and they're always picking up ticks in the woods.

They always get a Lyme shot as part of the annual regimen and regular application of Frontguard. Any tick that bites the dog generaly ends up dead and falls off.

PoPin Plug 11-25-2006 10:13 AM

i found 2 the other day on my dog...........

they look like green pee's with black legs

ProfessorM 11-25-2006 11:39 AM

Went for a quick walk with my daughter and the dog a few days ago and came out of the woods covered with ticks. After a complete tick check it was into the shower for her. I have been pulling close to 10 a week off the dog all year long and still plenty still and we have had a hard frost too. I usually use my fingers to feel all over the dog to find them. Dog thinks she is getting a massage. It is the only way to find them before they get swollen.


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