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Of dogs, wildlife and the 50mm macro..... (Warning! Contains bugs)
Of dogs, wildlife and the 50mm macro..... (Warning! Contains bugs)
All you need to do is take the dogs out to for a walk in the forest and you'll find the wildlife will come right into your house.
Picked this up off the kitchen floor this morning...
Nothing in the pics to indicate scale but it was about the size of a raisin, and made a very satisfying pop when I squashed it.
Re: Of dogs, wildlife and the 50mm macro..... (Warning! Contains bugs)
Two years ago I pulled one of those out of me after a cycling trip in Italy. Blood tests and other stuff to check for Lyme disease followed for a few months afterwards. Andy is right, be careful.
I'd give the dog a good check too - they can get Lyme disease and it is not at all nice.
We usually use the drops on the back of the dogs neck over the summer months which do work pretty well and last about a month as long as the dog stays out of the water (which ours don't!). If we find a tick on one of them or on the floor like this one, it's time to redo the drops.
Interestingly dogs are apparently more likely to get the arthritic features of Lyme disease and humans the neurological complications. We do get Lyme disease around here and our local docs are pretty good at recognising it - the first recorded case of neurological Lyme disease in Scotland was correctly diagnosed by a local GP about 20 years ago.
If I remember correctly there's less risk if the tick falls off fully fed than from trying to remove one incorrectly.
I'm sure your right David - I think trying to pull the tick off risks squeezing it and making it regurgitate blood back into the host, along with the Lyme bacteria. The tick removers are better, but best to avoid getting bitten in the first place. Socks pulled up over the trouser bottoms! Gets you some odd looks but works fairly well.
Re: Of dogs, wildlife and the 50mm macro..... (Warning! Contains bugs)
I've taken several f these of my partner after his field trips in Scotland. Needless to say we use the tick removal tool. Nasty beasties! Friend of mine had Lymes disease once. Had some really serious mental problems from it - luckily he seems ok now but it really is a good idea to check all over yourself every time you go out in deer/sheep territory.
Cindy
Cameras: EM1 MK2 and Mk1, E-620, E-410, Om4Ti
Lenses: 12-60, 50-200, Panny 100-400, 9-18, ZD 50mm, 14-54 Mk1, 70-300, 40-150, 14-42, OM 50mm F3.5 macro
Also: EC14, EX25, FS35, Vanguard tripod, and far too many bags!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ "The air of heaven is that which flows between a horse's ears...."
Re: Of dogs, wildlife and the 50mm macro..... (Warning! Contains bugs)
Frontline does well for dogs every six weeks or so. Buy the cheaper non prescription sort. Be careful too if you are taking a dog to the continent as the ticks there carry diseases we don't find here and for which there's no effective treatment.
I've taken several f these of my partner after his field trips in Scotland. Needless to say we use the tick removal tool. Nasty beasties! Friend of mine had Lymes disease once. Had some really serious mental problems from it - luckily he seems ok now but it really is a good idea to check all over yourself every time you go out in deer/sheep territory.
If you get them off within 24 hours the risk of Lyme disease is much reduced.
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