sandgrubber Posted November 26, 2011 Author Share Posted November 26, 2011 Thanks, everyone for replies. The best I can figure is, that, sigh, like so much else in life, it's complicated. I pull loads of ticks here in California. Sometimes I get three or four off each dog when we go through the daily inspections (you're right, the dogs love being feel-ed over). I get ticks as well as the dogs. It itches like hell and sometimes the pull-spots get infected when I pull them from myself (mostly it's the juveniles that get me . . . not the big fat suckers). I finally ended out putting the dogs on the chemical equivalent of Frontline-Plus in the spring, when we have the most ticks. But the little buggers we get here are a nuisance and not deadly. Lots of wildlife. No hope of getting rid of them. I like living where there's lots of wildlife. It scares the crap out of me to think of getting similar numbers of ticks when they may be a life and death matter. I spent ~15 yrs in WA, but haven't coped with the east coast conditions. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
kosmology Posted November 27, 2011 Share Posted November 27, 2011 Thanks, everyone for replies. The best I can figure is, that, sigh, like so much else in life, it's complicated. I pull loads of ticks here in California. Sometimes I get three or four off each dog when we go through the daily inspections (you're right, the dogs love being feel-ed over). I get ticks as well as the dogs. It itches like hell and sometimes the pull-spots get infected when I pull them from myself (mostly it's the juveniles that get me . . . not the big fat suckers). I finally ended out putting the dogs on the chemical equivalent of Frontline-Plus in the spring, when we have the most ticks. But the little buggers we get here are a nuisance and not deadly. Lots of wildlife. No hope of getting rid of them. I like living where there's lots of wildlife. It scares the crap out of me to think of getting similar numbers of ticks when they may be a life and death matter. I spent ~15 yrs in WA, but haven't coped with the east coast conditions. I guess it depends on whether or not you're prepared to risk living in a P tick region. The current La Nina weather pattern is affecting the east coast to such an extent that flooding/year-round torrential rain - and the humidity associated with this - is more than likely contributing to a more hospitable environment for the ticks. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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