NC19143 said:This is NON aviation, and the pictures are very gross, but we should be aware these exist and are now in our country.
This Warning came in my Mil-E-Mail this morning.
NC19143 said:This is NON aviation, and the pictures are very gross, but we should be aware these exist and are now in our country.
This Warning came in my Mil-E-Mail this morning.
My mom was bitten in Atlanta.Arnold said:Are these a localized to the NW or are they everywhere?
Arnold said:Are these a localized to the NW or are they everywhere?
Arnold said:Are these a localized to the NW or are they everywhere?
That's one where the cure is as gross as the problem! John Anderson, a leading nutritionist, was bitten by a brown recluse, and developed a detox solution that he drank which produced very good results in dealing with his bite. As a side effect, he lost significant weight as well. The product is now marketed as part of a weight loss package called Isagenix.sierra said:
Steve said:
Steve,Steve said:Updated 1/2005
Several important things:
Len Lanetti said:Steve,
Maybe it is just me but I'm not getting close enough to determine if a spider has 6 or 8 eyes...my theory is smack'em all with newspaper.
Arnold,
Where we are, deer ticks are the "bug" of concern.
I've found two wood ticks on Matthew and found one crawling around on my self, the school nurse removed one that was embeded on him as well.
Deer ticks are much harder to find...they are about the size of a pencil point. After removal look for a "bulls eye" type of marking and flu like symptoms within two weeks. No issues if you are bitten and get on antibiotics early enough.
Len
NC19143 said:Is this the Rocky Mountain spotted fever thing?
BruceAir said:Snopes.com, a great source for sorting through urban legends, photos of dubious origin, email petitions, and the like, has this information about the pictures that started this thread:
http://www.snopes.com/photos/bugs/brownrecluse.asp
Len Lanetti said:Steve,
Maybe it is just me but I'm not getting close enough to determine if a spider has 6 or 8 eyes...my theory is smack'em all with newspaper.
Arnold,
Where we are, deer ticks are the "bug" of concern.
I've found two wood ticks on Matthew and found one crawling around on my self, the school nurse removed one that was embeded on him as well.
Deer ticks are much harder to find...they are about the size of a pencil point. After removal look for a "bulls eye" type of marking and flu like symptoms within two weeks. No issues if you are bitten and get on antibiotics early enough.
Len
Interesting, Steve. I've been "aware" of the brown recluse for at least 25 years, mostly from newspaper articles. The local papers have had in-depth writeups warning of how dangerous they are and saying they are pretty much everywhere. Of course, we all know that newspapers are 100% reliable, right?Steve said:
gkainz said:That's one where the cure is as gross as the problem!
sierra said:Gross is in the eye of the geek.
Maverick said:By the way, it's my understanding these things have been around the US for some time now.
Gross is right.
Jeannie ~ I hate spiders
Thnks SteveSteve said:Updated 1/2005
http://spiders.ucr.edu/recluseid.html
Several important things:
1- check the map at spiders.ucr.edu/images/colorloxmap.gif to see if you live in an area that is supposed to have recluse spiders. If you do not live in any of the colored areas in the map, then it is HIGHLY UNLIKELY that you have a recluse spider. It is POSSIBLE but incredibly unlikely.
2- because so many people have mistaken markings on a spider as violins, this is NOT a reliable characteristic for a non-arachnologist. You need to look at the eye pattern.
3- even if you have a recluse, bites from them are extremely rare, despite all the stories. Many of the really graphic nasty wounds you see on the internet as recluse bites can also be other conditions like necrotizing bacteria and pyoderma gangrenosum. Ninety percent of brown recluse bites are not medically significant, heal very nicely often without medical. intervention and treatment for most brown recluse bites is simple first aid (RICE therapy – Rest, Ice, Compression, Elevation). Many conditions are misdiagnosed as recluse bites when their cause is something else like infection, bad reaction to medication, diabetic ulcers, Lyme disease, or other underlying medical conditions.
Len Lanetti said:Steve,
Maybe it is just me but I'm not getting close enough to determine if a spider has 6 or 8 eyes...my theory is smack'em all with newspaper.
Arnold,
Where we are, deer ticks are the "bug" of concern.
I've found two wood ticks on Matthew and found one crawling around on my self, the school nurse removed one that was embeded on him as well.
Deer ticks are much harder to find...they are about the size of a pencil point. After removal look for a "bulls eye" type of marking and flu like symptoms within two weeks. No issues if you are bitten and get on antibiotics early enough.
Len
Sorry, I have a HUGE gag reflex with maggots. When I was a kid, I once left a deer head lay around a little too long before cutting the antlers off...creepy crawly wiggly things when I lifted the skull just pretty much did me in....sierra said:what's gross? the maggots only eat the necrotic tissue. maybe it tickles!
Gross is in the eye of the geek.
NC19143 said:A gross of geeks.