Ticks...

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KJK

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Joined
Aug 1, 2017
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183
City & State/Province
Ten Mile, TN
Pulled a few cameras yesterday, and found this pic interesting. Have always seen ticks on deer, but the amount on this ones ears seemed a bit excessive. I also had very rarely seen a tick on the actual horn in velvet.
 

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I remember the first tcam pics I ever got from my first tcam. The ticks on the back of a deers ears looked like a bunch of grapes. I had no clue it was ticks.
 
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Similar situation on a buck from last year. That has to be uncomfortable.



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Proof why very few actually make pretty mounts.
That deer will likely have zero hair in the back of his ears come Nov, August it will be paper thin and likely rip when the taxidermist starts the skin prep process.

Here is one I had the pleasure working with, it was a Northern middle TN Dec cape too.
60a8eac04485e300eb479de8bfe3bef1.jpg



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I killed a big doe opening weekend at LBL one year. I grabbed her ears without looking to face her uphill to field dress her. I immediately felt the crawling on my hand. My hand was covered with seed ticks.

I think that may have been the last deer I killed before mid-October.
 
Just based on my inventory of trail cam pics,
ticks are much more "active" in late August vs. late September,
but remain at really dangerous levels until at least mid-October
(for those not using targeted tick sprays).
 
We should all set one of these out in the Spring. The rollers are treated with Permethrin, as the critters feed on the corn, its applied to their ears and neck.

One of these days I'm gonna build one.

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We have them on our cattle mineral feeders and they work extremely well...on our cattle.


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Just when you thought it couldn't get any worse . . . . . . .
Now, we are being invaded by the Asian Tick!
These "aggressive biters" have a history of being worse on their hosts than our "native" ticks.

Folks, this may become somewhat akin to deer management what the Asian Carp have become to fish management!

Maybe this "globalism" isn't all it's cracked up to be?

http://www.foxnews.com/science/2018/08/ ... ncern.html
 
I used permethrin in past, works well. I heard it lasts multiple washes, but never wash clothes during season, just before season. Then had a few ticks (probably seed ticks) on me in Dec, 20 degrees out, hunting on ground. Found out permethrin should be applied every 6 weeks. Saw online they are attracted to our CO2, so figures got some while on the ground. Ever deer or hog I shot had tons on their belly or in hide. Weird how they hide once you start field dressing...I won't see them again until I start skinning, never had one leave animal to attach on me. I avoid touching fur during skinning.
 

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