They like moist sweaty areas the best (on humans). Common sense is the best policy - wearing shorts and vest top and bounding through the heather like a loon is not a good idea.
A visual check when you camp up is worth while - groin; arm pits; butt crease; backs of knees; ankles etc. There is a chain of thought that the disease is only passed on when the tick has been feeding for some time - 12 plus hours.
I tend to think that a lot of cases never get mentioned to the Doc as people think it's something elese and weather it through - like 'flu or a nasty viral infection. In southern Africa there is a tick born disease called 'Tick 'Flu' which makes you feel like hell for three days and then cr*p for another week or so, after which you are deemed as proof from ever catching it again. As to deaths - any bug can kill given the right situation.
Doc, as a point of interest the last survey we did on deer on my patch, we only need Sika to make the full UK tally. We even have recorded sightings of Chinese Water Deer south of Swindon. The Fallow are undoubtedly historical escapees form a number of big estates along the A303 corridor. This last summer I have seen groups (!) of Muntjac in field corners near Exeter. Sadly their management is not down to us - we have to concentrate on Dormice and Water voles at the moment, along with 16 species of bat, four types of lizard, crested newts, smooth snakes, four rare butterflies, Merlin and owl flight paths and various flora!
Out of work I spend some time in a wood on the edge of Exmoor that backs onto the League of Cruel Sports site that Paul MacCartney paid for. The number of deer up there now is horrendous, badly interbred with obvious genetic faults, poor size and crawling with ticks. It's enough to make a man angry.
A visual check when you camp up is worth while - groin; arm pits; butt crease; backs of knees; ankles etc. There is a chain of thought that the disease is only passed on when the tick has been feeding for some time - 12 plus hours.
I tend to think that a lot of cases never get mentioned to the Doc as people think it's something elese and weather it through - like 'flu or a nasty viral infection. In southern Africa there is a tick born disease called 'Tick 'Flu' which makes you feel like hell for three days and then cr*p for another week or so, after which you are deemed as proof from ever catching it again. As to deaths - any bug can kill given the right situation.
Doc, as a point of interest the last survey we did on deer on my patch, we only need Sika to make the full UK tally. We even have recorded sightings of Chinese Water Deer south of Swindon. The Fallow are undoubtedly historical escapees form a number of big estates along the A303 corridor. This last summer I have seen groups (!) of Muntjac in field corners near Exeter. Sadly their management is not down to us - we have to concentrate on Dormice and Water voles at the moment, along with 16 species of bat, four types of lizard, crested newts, smooth snakes, four rare butterflies, Merlin and owl flight paths and various flora!
Out of work I spend some time in a wood on the edge of Exmoor that backs onto the League of Cruel Sports site that Paul MacCartney paid for. The number of deer up there now is horrendous, badly interbred with obvious genetic faults, poor size and crawling with ticks. It's enough to make a man angry.