Submitted by bunnybates t3_123y45m in RhodeIsland
cheesusbreezus t1_jdxprup wrote
I hiked big river management area recently and that was very nice. As others are saying, it's near impossible to avoid ticks, but taking necessary precautions helps a lot!
bunnybates OP t1_jdyolc2 wrote
My list is going great, thanks. This is what I'm getting at for the little pricks. I wonder if hiking is safer in colder weather because of the ticks?
cheesusbreezus t1_jdzybkz wrote
Ticks can actually live into temperatures in the negative, but spring is when they start coming out in droves. Basically before winter they attach to a mouse or deer (ie deer ticks)/ any host pending geographical region and when the weather starts to thaw is when they fall off and start reproducing. Female ticks can lay thousands of eggs a piece hence the abundance of them. Deer ticks are most prevalent in NE area.
It takes about 12-24 hours for a Lyme/disease transmission to even take affect so make sure to check yourself thoroughly immediately arriving home from a trail. They also love dark, moist areas so even if you think they didn't travel, don't underestimate it!!
I have some more gross facts, but I'll save those for another time. I had to go to an informative seminar on ticks one year and it was slightly traumatizing 😂
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