Topic: Please check your Christmas trees for ticks!!
Rumigirl
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 15091
posted
I just read that a Lyme patient bought a Christmas tree from NC at her local grocery store (could be from anywhere, however). She got it home and discovered that it was infested with ticks! Arghh!
Someone else who used to be on LN said that she got her Lyme from ticks on her Christmas tree.
So, please, please check and be careful. That's the last thing anyone needs.
Sigh, is anything safe from ticks anymore? Maybe a fake tree is safer, although not nearly as wonderful.
[Mods: I know that you may want to move this to General, but could you please leave a stub, so more people will see it? Thank you.]
[ 12-11-2013, 03:18 AM: Message edited by: Rumigirl ]
Posts: 3778 | From around | Registered: Mar 2008
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LisaK
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 41384
posted
how long do they stay on a cut tree?
-------------------- Be thankful in all things- even difficult times and sickness and trials - because there is something GOOD to be seen Posts: 3567 | From Eastern USA | Registered: Jul 2013
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GretaM
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 40917
posted
Thanks for the reminder!
I was contemplating getting a real tree this year, but the country areas where most of the tree farms are...are where all the new members to my support group are coming from.
Plastic it is!
Posts: 4358 | From British Columbia, Canada | Registered: Jun 2013
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posted
We no longer use fresh trees for that reason.
-------------------- Faithful
Just sharing my experience, I am not a doctor. Posts: 2682 | From Colorado | Registered: Oct 2009
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map1131
Frequent Contributor (5K+ posts)
Member # 2022
posted
They stay buried in the bark as long as it's cold. Once they get in the home where it's warm and toasty and smell/sense a blood meal, they crawl out.
Remember they need a blood meal to survive.
I wouldn't put a live tree in my home. Sure I miss the smell and the look of a live tree.
But I wouldn't rest. I would be on tick search 24/7. I believe there are some tips on leaving it our in the garage and treating tree with something. Sneaky tiny nasty things.
If they are in my garage they can get in my home, into my car. No way Jose!!!!!
Years ago, we were warned to find out which state the trees came from. If it was northeast, forget it. Well, this is widely spread to all states.
Pam
-------------------- "Never, never, never, never, never give up" Winston Churchill Posts: 6480 | From Louisville, Ky | Registered: Jan 2002
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Kudzuslipper
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 31915
posted
Oh my gosh... I just had a flashback.. Before I was dx'd... My DH thought he'd surprise me by getting a tree and setting it up as a surprise cause I was feeling pretty crappy just didn't know why yet. Normally, we would have gone and picked it out and set it up together.
Well, while decorating, these, what i learned later were jumping black spiders kept jumping off the tree at me. Never saw a tick, but then again I wasn't looking for them.
Next year, I was treating. No tree, but right after Christmas I went and got a really good fake at 1/2 price...
Not quite as magical, but it is much safer, and easier too!
Posts: 1728 | From USA | Registered: May 2011
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GretaM
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 40917
posted
This likterally gives me a ball of anxiety in the pit of my stomach.
Everytime I pass by a "Xmas Tree" for sale sign, I shudder.
I just picture, well I'm not going to write it out, but it plays like a horror movie.
The unsuspecting family.
Posts: 4358 | From British Columbia, Canada | Registered: Jun 2013
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Lymedin2010
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 34322
posted
Same thing for firewood. Those that use & store fire wood outside their house & then bring them in for the fall, winter, & part of spring need to be vigilant.
Same with potted plants that need to be brought in for the winter.
Posts: 2087 | From NY | Registered: Oct 2011
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posted
Please don't spray it with chemicals and then bring it into your home!
-------------------- --Lymetutu-- Opinions, not medical advice! Posts: 96227 | From Texas | Registered: Feb 2001
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Rumigirl
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 15091
posted
OMG, this is a bigger deal and more common than I even thought when I posted it!! What a horror! We all love Christmas trees, well, I guess that makes it, used to!
I used to be Miss Nature Girl before I finally found out what I had. All my life I was. No more.
I barely want to leave my big city anymore. Yes, I want to go out of the city, but I have had way too many ticks on me in recent years simply from taking a 24 hour trip to visit friends, where I was careful!
I just told my husband about this, and at first he thought it was over the top. Plus, he wanted to get a tree this year, since we'll be home. But then he said, "St. Tickalaus!"
Oh, good grief, is there anything left? Well, there's our hearts. The ticks can't take that away, unless they kill us. And even then, our love doesn't die.
Posts: 3778 | From around | Registered: Mar 2008
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GretaM
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 40917
posted
St. Tickalaus! Is hilarious! Had a good laugh at your hubby's play on words.
But seriously.
My mom aunt and grandma brought in a spruce yesterday to decorate.
Then had so much fun decorating it, I felt like a jerk when I asked them if they checked the tree for ticks.
And their answers were, "No, but if there were any, the cat would eat them."
what?!
Posts: 4358 | From British Columbia, Canada | Registered: Jun 2013
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Rumigirl
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 15091
posted
The cat would eat them??!! Huh? Is that a wild cat that you have? Not that even wild cats would eat ticks. That is really funny, except for the fact that maybe they believed it.
Posts: 3778 | From around | Registered: Mar 2008
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Kudzuslipper
Frequent Contributor (1K+ posts)
Member # 31915
posted
Love St. Tickleous!!! Raising a glass of coconut milk, stevia sweetened eggnog to your husband rumorgirl. A good man.
Posts: 1728 | From USA | Registered: May 2011
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