Let's Talk
Ticks
Let's talk ticks. There are three things
- OK, more than three thing - that I find people won't believe,
even after you prove it to them:
1) Warming up your car on cold mornings
is a waste of gas - just get in and drive, staying under 35 mph
for a mile or two;
2) Gas is gas - buying high octane gas
is a waste of money unless your car is one of the select few
that specifically demands it; and
3) finding a tick on your dog does not
signal the impending apocalypse.
I came by this last truth the hard way.
I was, brought up to believe that a tick was nothing less than
a miniature Bradley Fighting Vehicle. Indestructable. Slain only
by complete immersing in fire or by driving a silver stake through
its little heart.
I believed this until I pulled a tick off my dog one day, tossed
her (it's the bloodthirsty females we worry about) on the desk
and sliced and diced it with my x-acto knife. Not that I would
normally harm a fly, of course, but this was in the interest
of science. In about 11 pieces, the tick didn't seem likely to
resume foraging for a blood meal anytime soon.
This was the just first myth I would come to unravel about ticks.
I've already started at the end of a
tick's story so let's work back from there when you are out hiking
with your dog.
TALL TICK TALE #1 - Removing Ticks From
Your Dog (or yourself)
How many times have you heard that the
proper method - the ONLY safe way to remove ticks - is with tweezers.
Smearing vaseline on the tick first is even better. This is supposed
to guarantee the tick's head will not stay embedded in your dog.
Well, how many times do you have vaseline and tweezers at the
ready when you find a tick on your dog? The ONLY safe way to
deal with a tick is to get it off as quickly as possible. A tick
(and we're talking deer ticks, not the much more common dog tick)
cannot infect your dog with Lyme Disease until it is embedded
for some time (usually more than 24 hours). So don't be shy about
removing a tick with your fingers. Get in there and get it out.
TALL TICK TALE #2 - Leave As Little Of
Your Skin Exposed As Possible To Keep Ticks Off You
It didn't take many trips into the woods
to realize that wearing long sleeves and tucking long pants into
socks to stave off ticks was just plain ridiculous. All you do
when you load up on clothes in the summer - besides sweat - is
give your tiny enemy a lifetime's worth of hiding places.
When a tick hitches a ride on you or your dog it doesn't settle
in for a meal immediately. It checks out the new digs by wandering
around for awhile. Are you more likely to detect a tick crawling
on your bare leg or sneaking up your shirt sleeve?
So you don't need to dress like a beekeeper outdoors to detect
ticks - just check your skin and your dog regularly as you walk.
Catching a tick at this tme is the easiest way to combat it.
TALL TICK TALE #3 - The Best Way To Avoid
Ticks In The First Place Is To Stay Away From Trees
What is it with irrational fears we harbor
about our hair? Bats don't fly into our hair and ticks don't
lurk on tree limbs eyeing the tops of our heads like tycoons
checking out oceanfront property. Leave your tick-fighting hat
at home.
Ticks spend most of their time clinging to wispy blades of long
grass waiting for a warm-blooded passerby to hitch a ride. The
best place way to avoid ticks is to keep your dog and yourself
out in the middle of a trail as much as possible.
If you want to be outdoors, you aren't going to avoid all ticks.
But if you deal with them a little more realistically, you don't
need to avoid the outdoors, either.
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