Any animal that appears to have a foamy white beard would be a good one to avoid.
Other than that, most of the timid woodland creatures are very timid.
You are not likely to have a face to face with anything other than a raccoon looking for a half eaten Reese's under your sleeping bag.
I was hiking near Martha a few days ago and came home with a mess of them, even though I was pretty well doused with DEET from the knees down. I guess it's time to start covering more of myself with spray now that it's warming up.
No matter how safe the manufacturer (or worse, the government!) tells me the product is, anything that kills that quickly gives me reason to pause.
Why are you so confident about the safety of DEET? Type "DEET cancer" into Google and it will probably scare you also. I'm willing to chance it rather than risk tick bites (while at the same time exposing myself to possible DEET risks).
One case of cancer is enough for me I don't think I will be using deet anymore. That google search scared the hell out of me.
piker said:I usually try to stay in my canoe during the summer
As discussed before, my own experience is that DEET is worthless for tick protection. Get a Permethrin-based spray and use it to treat your clothes as per instructions (you douse the outside of all clothing and leave it out to dry for awhile). I got mine in the camping gear dept at WalMart, it's called "permanone".
People are probablly getting tired of me extolling the virtues of this stuff, but it works like magic for me. I live out in the woods and spend many hours hiking, working, sitting on things, and I haven't gotten any bites since I started using Permethrin. With DEET, I have watched ticks happily crawl up my pants while they were still moist from the spray. It also seems to be effective against chiggers.
A couple days ago it was warm and I was sitting on a log in the woods. I saw ticks crawling around on the ground and 3 of them were crawling up the leg of my jeans. None of them made it any higher than my knee; they all started freaking out and just dropped off. And these pants were treated with the spray almost a month ago. It even remains effective through several washings of the treated clothes. I have two sets of treated clothes which I store and wash separately from my regular clothes.
The stuff is so effective that just walking across the treated clothes is enough to do them in. Just be sure to tuck your pants into your socks, and treat socks, pants, shirt and shoes with the stuff, and check exposed skin from time to time.
One case of cancer is enough for me I don't think I will be using deet anymore. That google search scared the hell out of me.
Maybe you have something different in your chemistry that makes you attractive to ticks and you really need that poison because I have spent plenty of time in the most bug infested remote sites in Wharton winter and summer, extended trips lasting up to a week or more in time and I have had a few ticks on me