Most probably already know it but as a nurse I would always caution two things, One,the method described in the original post is much preferred to just pulling them out. Ticks have been known to leave small pieces of their mouth parts behind when you attempt to remove them without letting them "back out" voluntarily. I have seen first hand an abcess from one of those incidents and it was not pretty, requiring IV antibiotics and a hospital stay, just a word to the wise. And second, if you ever develop a bullseye rash around an area with a tick bite, you have been bitten by a deer tick, not a common tick and most likely you have just acquired lyme disease and you will need to be treated. Keep the tick if at all possible for lab testing and contact a physician. For those who dont know the difference between a common tick and a deer tick the deer tick is much much smaller, about the diameter of the head of a straight pin where even an immature common tick is at least double to triple that size. Good luck in the woods, Permethrin treated clothes will eliminate being bit pretty much at all.