http://wshu.org/post/beyond-lyme-new-tick-borne-diseases-rise-us
Another thing that might help would be wildfire but then again that is unacceptable.
Another thing that might help would be wildfire but then again that is unacceptable.
http://wshu.org/post/beyond-lyme-new-tick-borne-diseases-rise-us
Another thing that might help would be wildfire but then again that is unacceptable.
Definitely concerning. I already limit my field excursions to on trail experiences and even then I am constantly checking for ticks. Permethrin and DEET are great but traversing waist high grasses or through thick underbrush seems like a recipe for ticks to latch onto oneself. It is unfortunate as many prime habitats for flora and fauna are off trail but I just cant justify the risk. I do hope some form of vaccine or preventive eventually becomes available. Be safe out there! I do remember taking breaks on my many hikes in the 90's on the bare sand and never thinking twice about it.....not anymore.Well then maybe toxic mouse tunnels may be the way to go.As a young teenager my uncle kept snakes and i would scour the woods for white footed (Deer) mice and catch them bare handed to feed his snakes.It's a wonder I didn't end up with Lymes,of course this was late 70's,Lymes probably didn't exist back then.
But prescribed burns that slowly creep against the wind tend to scorch the leaf and low shrub layer more thoroughly than wildfire does, which usually is moving through an area quickly, burning mostly the higher fuels where there are less ticks.
I do hope some form of vaccine or preventive eventually becomes available.
German, I have seen the land after a wildfire, and it sure is scorched! Yes, those wildfires move quickly, but they are so damn hot that virtually nothing remains that is not burnt to a crisp. Are you aware of a study done? This is an interesting topic.
Both my Labs get the vaccine every year.There were 2 human vaccines about 15 years ago. One for dogs has been around several years. The human versions were discontinued in 2002 for a number of reasons, safety being one. A trial done and published in the Lancet in 2013 at the link. The one for dogs is still available; LymeVax from Zoetis.
http://thelancet.com/journals/laninf/article/PIIS1473-3099(13)70110-5/abstract?cc=y=
http://www.historyofvaccines.org/content/articles/history-lyme-disease-vaccine
https://academic.oup.com/cid/articl...ccines-against-Lyme-Disease-What-Happened-and
Last year, the CDC reported a new species of bacteria that causes Lyme disease. Up until then, researchers only recognized one bacteria species that carried the disease. While the new species causes most of the same symptoms as the old one, it also adds nausea and vomiting to the list. At the same time, it produces a rash that spreads out more rather than resembling a bullseye.
That happens when you fossilize, hardeneing of the srteries that is.And here we thought Lyme is a relatively new disease. Meet Ötzi, the 5300 year old Tyrolean mummy, he had it. Hardening of the arteries too
http://www.history.com/news/iceman-...-disease-blocked-arteries-sardinian-relatives