Yes. We have had a wet spring in KY which could be a factor.I'm a hunter (turkey and deer - for over 20 years) so I'm used to coming home from the woods and checking for and finding a tick or two... This year (I moved to rural Iowa a year ago this week) , I'm picking them off me without having been anywhere except around the yard - mowing, cleanup, etc... I've had about 20 w/in the last month. I've found two (dead) on the dog. I just found the third one within the last 12 hours! I even woke up at 3am, feeling one crawling up my leg. At least only one had latched on. How do they survive these winters? Are there tick "nests"? Any good way to kill them w/o spraying the whole place (3 acres)? At least the repelent medication for the dog seems to work (for him...).
Anyone else notice a huge increase this year?
That may explain the relative lack of them here this year...May was warmer and drier than usual, following a rather cold, wet April.My research indicates that ticks thrive in wet and warm weather, but hot and DRY weather kills them off.
We lived in SW Missouri for about three years; chiggers and ticks were ALWAYS bad there. As newbies, first thing we did was go pick some wild blackberries! We were eaten alive by chiggers and ticks!The wife had to pick a tick of me in the middle ofnight after a weekend at the farm. Lots of ticks up there, I had to change the belt on the finish mower and they were crawling all over the mower, I do usually spray down with deet or permethrin, Chiggers are really bad also,
I wonder if tick populations are more regional than cyclical. Here I can walk all day everyday in woods, tall grass, fields, and see maybe one in a year. I visited Rhinelander, WI, where we walked a utility right of way, and came back with hundreds. Both places have lots of deer.I'm a hunter (turkey and deer - for over 20 years) so I'm used to coming home from the woods and checking for and finding a tick or two... This year (I moved to rural Iowa a year ago this week) , I'm picking them off me without having been anywhere except around the yard - mowing, cleanup, etc... I've had about 20 w/in the last month. I've found two (dead) on the dog. I just found the third one within the last 12 hours! I even woke up at 3am, feeling one crawling up my leg. At least only one had latched on. How do they survive these winters? Are there tick "nests"? Any good way to kill them w/o spraying the whole place (3 acres)? At least the repelent medication for the dog seems to work (for him...).
Anyone else notice a huge increase this year?
I would tend to agree with this.As @deserteagle71 says, it is area specific; weather, water, habitat and animal reservoirs make a huge difference in the population. With the generally warmer weather, there are more ticks and they are more active. It was thought to correlate with increases in deer populations, but it doesn't appear to.
Maybe BnRidge is on to something. I also live in N.H., and we've had very few ticks this year up my way. Waay less than usual.They are plentiful this year in New Hampshire finding a couple every day off myself and dog after our daily hike in the woods.
I’m glad you posted this because I was just thinking the same thing. We’ve never seen ticks as bad as they are this year but I have no idea why. Starting to get a lot of feedback from the wife that Something Must Be Done too. We use permethrin on the goats and they seem to be tick free but when I’m armpit deep in the woods they always find a way to get me.Anyone else notice a huge increase this year?