Mister E
Well-Known Member
All this doom and gloom of blood sucking things is not the best advert for anywhere. I wonder how to link this thread to the Scottish Tourist Board.
Clegs seem to have been declining for quite a few years now?
Are you sure, I understood that without a host they would not survive, though I was also told that deer ticks are more dangerous than those on sheep. We have to treat our dog every month in summer with a poison administered to the back of his neck which enters his bloodstream, it seem to work, they drop off almost as soon as they start to gorge on his blood. Time something similar was developed for humans especially if it could be extended to midges but I suppose if there was a cure the solitude of the hills would be lost for ever. The poor old midge does not do any permanent damage so we could have worse problems though the wee Scots ones seem to be much more aggressive than those of the same species in Ireland. Clegs seem to have been declining for quite a few years now?
So is it your boat or your house in the Solent ? Or both ? And are the midges the reason?
You have to be careful with them. SWMBO got Lyme disease from a horsefly bite. It's not only the ticks.
This runs counter to everything I have read about Lyme disease, where the tick is specified as the only vector. Can you (or anyone else) point me towards a reference to non tick-borne Lyme disease?
She's the expert...!! She says that any biting creature eg mosquitos which bites an infected animal, can also pass on Lyme disease.
She saw the horsefly biting her and didn't think too much of it at the time. However at the time the disease was not well known and they had to bring a special antibiotic from the States where it had been developed at the town of Lyme.
It took several weeks of daily intravenous injections to cure her and she had quarterly check-ups for several years thereafter. Apparently the normal rate of antibody is 500 units (of something) and she has over 7000. The doctor says that any beastie biting her now will be done for..!!
On the other hand she is great for bringing on holidays. The mosquitos are especially attracted to her...!!
I know the Americans are paranoid about the disease, especially in Northeast states. When I visited in The Fall a few decades ago, there were warning signs all over the place on The Appalachian Trail. ( I only walked a couple of miles of it, not the couple of thousand !!)
Two or three years ago, I got the classic early stage warning of Lyme disease, rings like a target on my leg. The side effects of the medication were quite strange. The little blighters (ticks) are so small that you don't see them, and you may not be aware of them until an itch develops after a day or two. Midges and clegs pale into insignificance.
JumbleDuck;5802628 We carry tick removers on the boat; everybody should.[/QUOTE said:So do we, and we have rigourous mutual all-over body checking after being ashore, ooooo-errr, but if they are so small that you can't see them, the little plastic clawhammer isn't much help.
I have a tree in my back garden. It's the boat in the Solent (Portsmouth harbour)
We have to treat our dog every month in summer with a poison administered to the back of his neck which enters his bloodstream, it seem to work, they drop off almost as soon as they start to gorge on his blood.
Would love to know what you use on your dog. We use Advantage on our boxer's neck but she still gets lots of ticks - mainly on her head where she shoves it into the bracken. So if your treatment works better that would be great - tho she does like the biscuit she gets every time we remove a tick !
Would love to know what you use on your dog. We use Advantage on our boxer's neck but she still gets lots of ticks - mainly on her head where she shoves it into the bracken. So if your treatment works better that would be great - tho she does like the biscuit she gets every time we remove a tick !
They can be seriously bad - particularly in muggy weather with no wind.
The good news is that they won't bother you on a yacht a little way from the shore. But personally I would NEVER camp in a tent in the highlands/islands - there are times in the evening or early morning in Skye when you wouldn't want to go out of the house.
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we also discovered that they are not keen on jos sticks - and they smell better than the mosquito coils
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I'm sitting indoors in South Buckinghamshire with the windows shut and all this talk of midges is making me itch!!