Viewing 15 posts - 41 through 55 (of 55 total)
  • Ticks – how do I deal with the little buggers?
  • Waderider
    Free Member

    Every year this topic comes up and every year the same crap is posted.

    The simple requirement is to remove the tick including buried mouth parts without it regurgitating its stomach contents into your bloodstream.

    Tick removal tool or tweezers shaped so they only grip the tick right next to your skin do the job. There is no need to twist.

    Smothering, burning etc. increases your chance of catching something from the tick as it is likely to get distressed and vomit its stomach contents back into your bloodstream.

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    Now I'm worried, tick twister is the next tool in the medical pack for sure!

    Onzadog
    Free Member

    Never had one myself but the dog has picked up a couple. Seems to be very location specific. He never gets them where we live in Nottingham but only seems to get them when we visit people in Norfolk.

    We use a tick twister, and we twist (as per the instructions, the clue is in the name) and it's always worked. Just bought a couple extra for us to take to the Alps with us (tick twisters that is)

    Drac
    Full Member

    The twist in the tick twister is more for the design not because you have to remove ticks by twisting.

    Phototim
    Free Member

    I'm pretty sure if there was a way to remove a tick badly, I did it yesterday. If I was him I would have definitely Sh*t myself and vomited before having my arse pulled off. Perhaps I should cut my leg off with a junior hack saw.

    flipiddy
    Free Member

    I got Lyme a couple of years back. Possibly from poor removal where the tick regurgitated, or from one I didn't notice. There was no rash that I perceived. Sometimes Lyme can be dormant for many years, before becoming activated by trauma or a supressed immune system. Mine manifested itself several years after the bite.

    Trust me when I say that Lyme is very, very nasty and is not necessarily curable. I have been lucky to keep my job, but I certainly wasn't able to get much riding in for a couple of years as the Lyme arthritis saw to that.

    The easiest cure is by prevention. Remove the tick quickly and correctly. Avoid hanging around in long grass or cover up. Check yourself for ticks after every ride.

    If you develop ME type symptoms, even years after being bitten, there is a distinct possibility that it could be Lyme.

    Additionally, the NHS is a dinosaur in terms of knowledge of Lyme, so do not expect them to offer you appropriate treatment.

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    Phototim – Member

    I'm pretty sure if there was a way to remove a tick badly, I did it yesterday. If I was him I would have definitely Sh*t myself and vomited before having my arse pulled off. Perhaps I should cut my leg off with a junior hack saw.

    😆 😆 😆 😆

    Phototim
    Free Member

    Tick remover purchased, a pair of tweezers with hooks on the end. Also got some extra strong jungle formula to keep them off me. Fingers crossed I haven't caught anything 🙁

    user-removed
    Free Member

    Pulled this monster off my dog after a holiday in NW Scotland…

    That was the day after I pulled all these off;

    The big one popped like a grape when I stood on it and spread a surprising amount of goo around… Nasty !

    Lionheart
    Free Member

    Ticks are pretty serious with Deer Ticks, the tiny black ones usually being the worse (the bigger pink-ish ones are usually sheep ticks -but there are lots of different ones!). We have Lyme D in lots round here but even those without the big LD can make you sick for a day or two.

    We remove 2-5 off us most weekends and upto ten a week off the dogs. We have tried all the methods and by far the easiest is the Tom O Tick twister, and they are cheap -ought to be one in every first aid kit/home. They come out by twisting anti-clockwise, not sure why (believe its their build?) but we have tried every way and I promise most success comes from this, straight pulls often leave the head or mouth parts in.

    They come off veg/wood etc so if you don't brush against any thing they will struggle to get to you. If in a known tick area best to keep legs covered, only few times will have you doing this promise! And check at the end of the day, some are tiny but can be felt as they are hard though smaller than a pin head. They are climbing to where its warm so check all the way up, (don't usually attach for an hour or two) . I have found them there a day or two later!!

    If you get any rings, lumps or flu like symptoms see the Doc but they often don't know much about them so check the net. Good luck keep them off or pull them off safely (carefully) …… Happy Trails

    steffybhoy
    Free Member

    flipiddy – Member

    I got Lyme a couple of years back.

    Same here, really knocks u for six, knackered all the time, memory loss, weird things happening physically: numbness, arthritis syptoms, bubbling feeling of the blood.
    Nhs gave me 2 weeks antibiotics, helped for a bit. Now they more or less don't want to know.
    There is a docu-film called under our skin which gives a good account about how bad this disease is, and how health workers are split over the long term treatment/severity of the disease.

    flipiddy
    Free Member

    Same here, really knocks u for six, knackered all the time, memory loss, weird things happening physically: numbness, arthritis syptoms, bubbling feeling of the blood.
    Nhs gave me 2 weeks antibiotics, helped for a bit. Now they more or less don't want to know.
    There is a docu-film called under our skin which gives a good account about how bad this disease is, and how health workers are split over the long term treatment/severity of the disease.

    Sucks mate. Are you getting any treatment? Feel free to drop me an email if you want (in profile)

    MrWoppit
    Free Member

    "Checking myself for ticks…"

    Surely, if one of these little bar stewards sunk it's rotatory fangs in, you'd know about it?

    AnalogueAndy
    Free Member

    Mr Woppit – Member
    "Checking myself for ticks…"

    Surely, if one of these little bar stewards sunk it's rotatory fangs in, you'd know about it?

    You'd be surprised, not always painful and as already said they've a tendency to crawl to place you might not immediately notice them! 😯

    anotherdeadhero
    Free Member

    I picked one up at the Bristol Bike fest this year. They're def about up there.

Viewing 15 posts - 41 through 55 (of 55 total)

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