You mean a tick can survive the acid bath of the Peak? :eek: I wouldn't want to encounter one of those!
But seriously....it was playing the bagpipes :D
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I'd have sprayed the little tw@t with carburettor cleaner or Trichlorethane motor cleaner, but then not everyone has a bottom drawer full of solvents like me. :rolleyes:
I'm sure I remember getting one on me as a kid, and my neighbour put a hot lighter on it, so it fell off.
This was 25 years ago though, so might be worth a 2nd opinion
Found this on the Beeb website...full of spelling mistakes! :D
Tick Removal
Some people don't like the idea of an eight-legged blood-sucking creature being attached to them or their pet for too long. Pulling them off os the best way of getting ride of them. It used to be thought that burning ticks off or smothering them in alcohol, vinegar, Vaseline, butter etc would make them fall off or suffocate and die respectively. However, it is well establsihed that this manner of tick removal causes regurgitation of gut and salivary gland content into the patient during the tick removal process and, thereby, increases transmission of Borrelia spirochaetes that cause Lyme disease (see below). The ticks should simply be removed by pulling off:
Plucking or pulling off. Look closely, and you'll see that the fangs go in, then the bulge of the head starts. You're aiming for the join between the two. Get a pair of tweezers, and in one movement deftly grab and twist, in an anti-clockwise direction - according to conventional wisdom, this way you can hopefully avoid snapping the bug1. Special tweezers can even be bought for the purpose!
Nurse. The preferred method - find someone who is paid to do the job well.
Make sure you know what you are doing - any of the self-help methods carry a risk as described below, and if you're not sure, follow the final suggestion. Leaving part of the tick in the flesh can leave you open to all sorts of infections, not just the ones listed below. As we will see, the risks of infection are not worth it.
this is a good article
http://www.ukclimbing.com/articles/page.php?id=398
latest wisdom is not to use oil/vaseline/other smothering techniques as this can make them "puke" mankiness back into your blood - so stick to tweezers or specialist remover.
All the running I do in the peak, Scotland Lakes etc I reckon I've only ever had one which I spotted on my socks after a run. I know they are out there(not that I want them of course) but I am surprised given my above statement that so many people find them.
2 of the Glossop MR Team got Lymes a few years ago from Tick bites in Longdondale
Even flat tweezers crushes the body of the tick causing it to push it's gubbins into your body. Emmilou's suggestion of pet tick removal tools are the best thing. And don't twist them out. Pull gently and keep a steady pull and they release.