Are you going away for camping or hiking? Do you hunt or fish? Do you love hiking? Do you work in your garden? Be aware of the presence of ticks and avoid a tick bite.

The summer is almost here and ticks are on the go.

Lymes-Blacklegged Tick Transmit Borrelia burgdorferi

As ticks tend to be more active during warmer months and increase sickness, we should take safety measures to avoid a tick bite and Lyme symptoms and other diseases.

Here is a short list of disease caused by a tick bite - Tick-borne diseases:

·         Anaplasmosis  - a disease caused by a infected tick bite (most commonly – blacklegged tick).

·         Ehrlichiosis is a disease that is spread by a tick bite, most commonly - the long star tick. Ehrlichiosis infect and kill the white blood cells. Ehrlichiosis is transmetted through a tick bite.

·         Rocky Mountain spotted fever is the most dangerous and most frequently reported in the United States. The American dog tick and wood tick carry the bacterium that causes this disease. After an infeted tick bites you, the disease is passed through the skin into the bloodstream.  Other names of the disease: “tick typhus,” “Tobia fever” (Colombia), “São Paulo fever” or “febre maculosa” (Brazil), and “fiebre manchada” (Mexico).

·         Colorado Tick Fever is an acute viral infection transmitted by an infected wood tick bite. It is also called Mountain tick fever, Mountain fever, American mountain fever.  

·         Tularemia is also called Deerfly fever; Rabbit fever; Pahvant Valley plague; Ohara disease; Yatobyo (Japan); Lemming fever

 It's a serious infectious disease. You can contract with Tularemia through and infected tick bite, horsefly or mosquito. Tularemia is fatal in about 5% of untreated cases, and in less than 1% of treated cases.

·         Babesiosis is a malaria-like disease, an infection of red blood cells.  It is transmitted through the tick bite. Animal hosts include cattle, sheep, deer, and dog. Other  names: piroplasmosis

·         Tick paralysis is the only tick-borne disease that is not caused by an infectious organism. Tick paralysis illness is caused by attaching to the skin to feed on blood. During the feeding process, the toxin enters the bloodstream. Hard- and soft-bodied female ticks are believed to make a poison that can cause children paralysis.

·         Relapsing fever is an infection and transmitted through louse or soft-bodied tick bite. The death rate for untreated Relapsing fever ranges from 10 - 70%.  Other names: Tick-borne relapsing fever, Louse-borne relapsing fever

You can find ticks on plants and on animals in low-lying brush in woods, grasslands, marshlands and at the seashore.

Blood of natural world, birds, and people is the food of ticks. A tick feeds itself through a tick bite.

Ticks attach to you as you rub against bushes, plants, and grass. Ticks often move to a warm, moist location, like your head, neck, armpits, ankles, or groin (between your legs). 

Ticks may crawl on the skin for up to one hour before biting you.

There are many kinds of ticks. Blacklegged ticks or deer ticks (which carry Lyme disease bacteria) are usually tiny, no bigger than the head of a pin. Much bigger ticks are woodland and dog ticks.

Wild birds and animals can carry ticks, same as habitat animals and pets as dogs, horses, and cows.

Ticks may climb on people from animals, leaves and branches. A squirrel can drop down a tick on lawn, and you can be careless in checking for ticks than they were before treating their lawns.

Ticks cannot jump or fly

The best way to keep ticks out is to put in a fence that will keep out animal carriers such as deer and rodents.

By keeping animals carriers off your land, you can also decrease the damage done to your garden.

Avoid a tick bite! Stay out of areas where ticks live.

Get 10 tips to Lyme disease prevention

Subscribe to this blog's RSS feed

Department of health in New York -Lyme Disease* About 10% of the blog readers are New-Yorkers. Get some facts of the Lyme Disease cases in the big apple published by the department of health in New-York. Read more facts  and get details of the geographical distribution of Lyme disease all over the world. County Confirmed Probable Total Footnotes Albany 564 74 638 Allegany 2 0 2 Broome 15 4 19 Cattaraugus 4 0 4 Chautauqua 6 1 7 Chenango 3 1 4 Clinton 6 1 7 Columbia 429 155 584 Cortland 1 0 1 Delaware 6 3 9 Dutchess 722 419 1141 Erie 7 1 8 Essex 22 2 24 Franklin 4 1 5 Fulton 5 1 6 Genesee 0 1 1 Greene 246 67 313 Herkimer 9 2 11 Jefferson 34 3 37 Lewis 2 0 2 Livingston 1 1 2 Madison 7 4 11 Monroe 11 1 12 Montgomery 17 8 25 Nassau 40 0 40 Niagara 2 1 3 Oneida 25 1 26 Onondaga 46 21 67 Ontario 1 1 2 Orange 336 60 396 Orleans 1 0 1 Oswego 5 1 6 Otsego 12 2 14 Putnam 119 83 202 Rensselaer 436 106 542 Rockland 243 110 353 Saratoga 270 94 364 Schenectady 77 16 93 Schoharie 20 3 23 Schuyler 0 1 1 St Lawrence 24 1 25 Steuben 3 2 5 Suffolk 350 192 542 Sullivan 103 15 118 Tioga 1 0 1 Tompkins 38 4 42 Ulster 565 213 778 Warren 17 3 20 Washington 172 11 183 Wayne 2 0 2 Westchester 172 92 264 Total 5,203 1,783 6,986                                                                         * Provisional data ** [...]

Continue Reading...

Get Rid of Lyme disease- Joe Barton

doratr on May 27th, 2009
Overcome your Lyme Disease in 72 Hours or less using a safe, natural home remedy!   Developed in part by a brilliant doctor who happens to be the only person ever to win TWO Nobel Prizes.   Get access to a message board where other Lyme Disease sufferers discuss the remedy - giving you helpful success stories, Lyme tips, [...]

Continue Reading...

A One-Minute Cure for all Diseases?

doratr on May 27th, 2009
Hi , If you’re like everyone on this planet, you’ve undoubtedly been affected by disease in one way or another. Either you have suffered from disease yourself – or someone you care about is (or has been) a victim of a devastating disease -- or maybe even died from it. QUESTION: Did you know … that there’s a [...]

Continue Reading...

Lymes Disease Treatment - Video

doratr on May 26th, 2009
A 3d animation describing how Lyme disease works inside your body and a lecture on different Lyme disease treatments. Get information of how to get rid of Lyme disease

Continue Reading...

Tick Bite - Treatment Guide

doratr on May 12th, 2009
How to remove a tick? How to Treat a Tick Bite? When a tick bites, it buries its head in skin. It breathes through the back. The tick attaches itself by its mouth. Try pulling the tick gently with tweezers. Be careful.  If the tick is broken off while the process of removal process, the tick will [...]

Continue Reading...

How to Avoid A Tick Bite?

doratr on May 11th, 2009
Some more great tips to avoid a tick bite and prevent Lyme disease If you're spending time outdoors in wooded or high-grass areas, take the following steps to prevent a tick bite. Reduce your risk of lymes disease by following these tips: After spending time outdoors in wooded or grassy areas, check your clothes and then throw [...]

Continue Reading...

There is no excerpt because this is a protected post.

Continue Reading...

Lyme Disease Symptoms - Kathy Cavert

doratr on April 16th, 2009
Denise Lang's List of Lyme Disease Symptoms (Dr. Burrascano's original list with the format and additions of Kathy Cavert)   Lyme disease - Tick Bite 1. Tick bite (deer, dog or other) 2. Rash at site of bite 3. Rashes on other parts of your body 4. Rash basically circular and spreading out [...]

Continue Reading...

Symptoms – Lyme disease

doratr on March 5th, 2009
Not everyone knows that tick deer bites actually cause people to have Lyme disease. Symptoms of disease would start showing one or two weeks after a person has been exposed to tick bites. Preventing yourself from tick bite will prevent Lyme. Symptoms do not all appear in all Lyme patients and they may present [...]

Continue Reading...

The information provided herein should not be used during any medical diagnosis or treatment of any medical condition. A licensed medical professional should be consulted for diagnosis and treatment of any and all medical conditions. Privacy Policy Statement © The webpage(s) you just visited are protected by the copyright laws of the United States of America.