Updated on October 28, 2022
Fall tick season is in full swing and so are popular outdoors activities, whether hiking in the woods to enjoy the peak leaf season, raking, or taking the dog out for a walk through the park.
But fall also brings unwelcome visitors: adult black-legged or deer ticks that can transmit Lyme and other tick-borne diseases. While ticks are commonly found in heavily wooded areas, they also thrive in backyard grasses, gardens, unmanicured hedges and leaf litter. In fact, experts say that the majority of people who develop tick-borne diseases came in contact with the tick that made them sick right in their own backyards.
“Most people think ticks disappear once the weather turns cooler,” says Global Lyme Alliance Board Member, Nancy Del Genio, “but they remain active as long as the temperatures are above freezing and the ground is not frozen or covered by snow. It’s crucial for anyone who enjoys spending time outdoors to take steps to protect themselves from ticks.”
Lyme disease is the most commonly reported vector-borne illness in the country, with more than 476,000 new cases each year. Lyme has been reported in all 50 U.S. states and 80+ countries. A bite from a tick that transmits Lyme can leave you with a mix of symptoms that range from fatigue and flu-like aches and pains to serious, long-term complications that can affect the brain, joints, nerves, muscles and heart.
“Early detection is crucial, but unfortunately commonly used diagnostic tests miss 55% of positive Lyme cases,” said Del Genio. “Without a reliable diagnostic test, it’s all too easy for patients to slip through the cracks and wind up suffering from late stage, debilitating, Lyme disease before the disease is even detected." up
To protect you and your family from ticks this fall season, GLA recommends:
If you find a tick on your body, it’s important to remove it safely. Use a fine-tipped tweezer to grab the tick “head” as close to the skin as possible and pull it out like a splinter. “Adult ticks have longer mouth-parts,” said Dr. Stafford, a medical-veterinary entomologist at The Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station, whose research focuses on the ecology and control of the blacklegged tick. “So it can be a little harder to remove them. Don’t yank, just pull gently and firmly.”