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Author Topic: Tick removal.  (Read 659 times)

Offline stabow

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Tick removal.
« on: May 07, 2012, 10:24:00 AM »
This might be old hat to some but is new to me and it works.
Take a cotton ball and apply some liquid dish washing soap I used Dawn, and rub on the tick for 10 or 15 seconds and the tick backs out and will be sticking to the cotton ball. This works great for removing ticks from you dogs and yourself.......stabow
The best thing about owning a dog is that someone is happy when you come home.

Offline eminart

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #1 on: May 07, 2012, 10:28:00 AM »
I've always just pulled them off. I know, I know, I'm going to die someday.
   :knothead:  

I actually pulled off about a dozen this weekend during and after my hog scouting trip. Probably picked off another 50 that were still crawling. They were thick where I was.
“...the old ones ... knew in their bones... that death exists, that all life kills to eat, that all lives end, that energy goes on. They knew that humans are participants, not spectators.” -- Stephen Bodio, On the Edge of the Wild

Offline collofthewild

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #2 on: May 07, 2012, 10:46:00 AM »
Hopefully i wont be trying that anytime soon. but when the need arises, I will sure give it a try! thanks for the info  :)

Offline Tim Finley

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #3 on: May 07, 2012, 11:01:00 AM »
I've used amonia and it works but some say they regurgitate before they back out thats not good !

Offline straitera

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #4 on: May 07, 2012, 11:17:00 AM »
Turn on the stove burner to Hi. Get a single sheet of toilet paper & fold it in half a few times. Cover tick w/paper & pull straight off. They adhere to the TP. Throw his kicking screaming nasty parasite disease carrying butt in the fire! Have what's left of a good day.
Buddy Bell

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Offline LoweBow

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #5 on: May 07, 2012, 11:30:00 AM »
did the liquid soap trick on my wife yesterday...I just use a dish cloth w/ some on it and make a circular patern over the tick...pop right out!  Have done this dozens of times and never had the inflamed red irritated area that comes up afterwards like when pulled.
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Offline Bjorn

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #6 on: May 07, 2012, 11:34:00 AM »
Tweezers and steady pull works for me. If they have latched on good I send them to the lab-happens once or twice a year.

Offline team fudd

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #7 on: May 07, 2012, 11:45:00 AM »
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.

Offline straight_arrow

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #8 on: May 07, 2012, 11:45:00 AM »
If it's a deer tick and it's been attached take it in for testing.  I would strongly suggest taking the 30 treatment before the test results are in.  Don't take a chance with Lyme disease! I've been there!
"They're all trophies"

Offline eminart

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #9 on: May 07, 2012, 12:13:00 PM »
Is lyme disease as common as people make out? Because I've had lots of deer ticks on me and never gotten sick. And I do know the difference in deer ticks and other ticks (they're tiny). Is it possible some people have more resistance to it than others? Of the dozen or so ticks I had "stuck" on me this weekend, several of them were deer ticks. I even found one more this morning before I got in the shower.

The native americans didn't have any Permanone to spray on themselves and I assume they weren't all walking around with Lyme Disease. Is this just an affliction of peoples who have no immunity to it or what?
“...the old ones ... knew in their bones... that death exists, that all life kills to eat, that all lives end, that energy goes on. They knew that humans are participants, not spectators.” -- Stephen Bodio, On the Edge of the Wild

Offline Rick Richard

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #10 on: May 07, 2012, 12:20:00 PM »
I have used finger nail polish remover on a Qtip...worked well.

Offline Pete McMiller

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #11 on: May 07, 2012, 12:40:00 PM »
eminart,

Yes, it is that common in certain areas of the country.  Here in Wisconsin as well as in the NE one can almost assume that deer ticks have Lymes.  I am not aware that anyone has an immunity from Lyme disease AND just because you got it once does not give you one iota of immunity the second time.  Talked with a guy from New York recently that has had it six times.  It is nothing to fool with and in later stages has the potential to be fatal.

I have had my dog vaccinated against Lymes for 10 years but even the vet will tell you that the vaccination is only about 80% effective.  A buddy had his lab get it after being vaccinated.

Since the host of the tick is the deer the current prevailance maybe related to the deer population .............. or not.

Be glad it isn't in your area though keeping it out will likely be impossible.
Pete
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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #12 on: May 07, 2012, 12:43:00 PM »
Have been using the subject ascribed method with success for years. Have had some ticks that have held on for several minutes before releasing.
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Offline njloco

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #13 on: May 07, 2012, 03:12:00 PM »
Young living Essential oil of oregano, makes them back out immediately !
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Offline Goshawkin

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #14 on: May 07, 2012, 03:44:00 PM »
Buy one of the Tickkeys.They're a little aluminum bottle opener looking thing.You can hook it right to your keychain,they only cost a couple bucks. You just slide it over the tick and it slips him right out,mouth parts and all.Doesn't squish the body at all. Grabbing,rubbing,burning them ect. makes them release more of the "bad stuff" into you. We're loaded with ticks here and just about anyone who spends time outside here gets ticks.Alot of Lymes here to. I have it.My 8 year old daughter spent a few days in the hospital because of it.Caused her to get fluid in her hip joint so bad she couldn't walk. I can name off 50 people I know who have it here,without really even having to think about it.I've shot deer with so many ticks around their eyes,ears and neck,you didn't even want to touch them.Hang the deer up with a cut off 55gal drum filled with soapy water under them.In a day or two there will be hundreds and hundreds of ticks in the water.

Offline KSdan

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #15 on: May 07, 2012, 04:24:00 PM »
Interesting that there is much Lyme's disease as reported here.  My doc here in KS is hesitant to treat as there is no reportable populations/epidemic concerns. ???
If we're not supposed to eat animals ... how come they're made out of meat? ~anon

Bears can attack people- although fewer people have been killed by bears than in all WWI and WWII combined.

Offline Builder

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #16 on: May 07, 2012, 04:30:00 PM »
Goshawkin,
Question for you.

I hunt Western Wisconsin and we are indundated with deer ticks.

What I have found is if we let our deer hang for a day or two all the ticks leave the dead body, helps to not deal with them when butchering.

Do you use the 55 gallon drum and soapy water in lieu of hanging the deer for a day or two?
USMC
Providing the enemies of America to die for thier countries.

Offline Pete McMiller

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #17 on: May 07, 2012, 04:42:00 PM »
Builder,

We have had similar circumstances when we used to be able to hunt bear in Ontario in the spring.  The bears would be covered in ticks.  We found that if we hung them by the nose overnight all the ticks would migrate up to the head (the last of the warmth I guess).  We would skin the bear out and put the hide in a garbage bag and put in the freezer for a few days - all the ticks would die and could then be brushed off the hide.
Pete
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CTAS
PBS

Charter member - Ye Old F.A.R.T.S and Elkaholics Anonymous

MOLON LABE  [mo 'lon  la 've]

"That human optimism & goodness that we put our faith in, is in no more danger than the stars in the jaws of the clouds." ............Victor Hugo

Offline Doc Nock

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #18 on: May 07, 2012, 05:30:00 PM »
What Goshawkin said is what the varied Lyme sites and support groups suggest.

Anything that makes them back out makes them also "throw up" into your body and out comes so many more of them pesky li'l spirchettes (?) that carry lyme.

Lyme tests are notorious for FALSE negatives, meaning that they say you dont 'have it but it's not true, you do!

Western Blot is one reputed good test, but there are few labs that do them I'm told and most won't take anybody's insurances... and they're not cheap.

Ounce of prevention. Scares the bejabbers outa me when I think about it... Permanone all the way!
The words "Child" and "terminal illness" should never share the same sentence! Those who care-do, others question!

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Offline Terry Lightle

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Re: Tick removal.
« Reply #19 on: May 07, 2012, 06:07:00 PM »
We just pluck em here in Osage county
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