janet_rose
Posted : 3/8/2008 11:51:18 PM
luvmyswissy
My dogs bring in ticks all year round. If the temp is above 40 they are out and we lots deer that roam our front yard, eat from our apple tree and drink from our ponds.
"Deer ticks" or "bear ticks" are offically called the "blacklegged tick". Deer (and other large animals) can carry the adult ticks, but virtually all of these ticks spend their early life attached to field mice of one variety or another, so that is the time to kill the ticks.
http://www.ticktubes.com/tickcontrolfaq.html
Damminix Tick Tubes are targeted to the life cycle of disease-carrying black legged ticks (deer ticks) in the Eastern United States. Damminix Tick Tubes is a registered pesticide product and is only available in the states of MA, MD, ME, PA, NY, RI, CT, NH, NJ and VA. For 2008, we will be expanding our product registration area, based on customer requests. Please email us for more information, and we will be sure to let you know as soon as registration comes to your state.
These tubes are basically rolls of cardboard that contain cotton balls soaked in permethrin. The mice take the cotton balls back to their nests to use as bedding, and the permethrin kills all the ticks in the nest.
http://www.garden-shops.com/ticktubes.html
Alright, so here’s how to make your own, slightly different, ‘traps’: Put on gloves and goggles, spray a permethrin insecticide onto pieces of felt, heavy cloth or old carpet, line the insides of pieces of PVC plumbing pipe with the sprayed material, then place the pipes in brushy areas around your property. The mice will go inside the pipes to hide (they love tight little spaces) and the permethrin will kill their ticks-all without you spraying yourself OR the environment! Heck, you won’t even hurt the mice! Whether you use Daminex tubes or make your own ‘mouse wipes’, space the traps about 10 yards apart on the perimeter of your property, where overgrown, brushy areas begin. Don’t waste them on manicured lawns; you won’t find ticks there.
http://www.health.state.mn.us/divs/idepc/dtopics/tickborne/ticks.html (life cycle of the blacklegged tick)
Deer ticks live for two years and have three blood meals. The life cycle begins when the female lays eggs. As the eggs mature, they develop into larvae, then nymphs, and finally adults. ...
Larvae usually feed on white-footed mice or other small mammals. ... The nymph ... takes its second feeding from a mammal. ... The adult female ticks feed and mate on large animals.