Author Topic: Things that try eating you when out and about  (Read 28179 times)

stuart

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #15 on: June 14, 2015, 05:12:22 PM »
I think most of the problems I've had have been a consequence of the antibiotics and the affect they had on my digestive system. They absolutely destroyed me when I first took them (vomiting started within an hour of taking them, and as for the other end...  :o ) and frankly it took a long time for my system to get back to normal.

As for snakes, we have adders in Scotland but they're lazy little things that sun themselves on rocks and hardly bother anyone. We have lizards that have identical markings though and they like to hang around your feet scaring you slightly when you look down and think you see an adder at your feet  :D

eyesup

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #16 on: June 15, 2015, 05:21:40 PM »
You probably already know this.

Whenever you are on antibiotics one of the first things to do is increase the intake of dairy products.  Yogurt, cheese and/or buttermilk. They all help to elevate the microbe levels in your GI track back to healthy levels.

Duane

stuart

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #17 on: June 15, 2015, 09:07:33 PM »
You probably already know this.

Whenever you are on antibiotics one of the first things to do is increase the intake of dairy products.  Yogurt, cheese and/or buttermilk. They all help to elevate the microbe levels in your GI track back to healthy levels.

Duane

Unfortunately the antibiotics you take for Lyme disease have their effectiveness reduced by dairy products and you have to really cut down on them while you're on the medication  :(

eyesup

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #18 on: June 15, 2015, 11:58:13 PM »
Yeah, probably should have said, "After the medications were done."  I usually start the dairy uptake after I'm finished with the pills.

One advantage though, you will lose some weight! For me, that's a benefit. Others may already be at their optimal weight.

Duane

Georgew1959

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #19 on: June 20, 2015, 09:24:14 AM »
I'd heard about garlic as a repellant for midges (which started in May this year - really early for the eastern Scottish Highlands so a bad year is expected). If they're a tick repellant too I'll have to increase my intake, as the deer population has grown in these parts and they haven't all headed for the higher slopes for the summer in recent years (as evidenced by the damage done in my veggie patch!).

The cat's had a couple of ticks already this year, but thankfully we've avoided them so far. That may be due to the weather which hasn't often been great for getting out gardening and walking naked so far.

jbeegoode

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #20 on: June 21, 2015, 06:03:48 PM »
Friday night we did a benefit for our sweat (the owner is selling it and we are trying to buy it, anybody got a couple hundred K?) Afterward, as I stood just outside in the dark talking to a friend, I noticed something on my feet (in flip flops). I thought that it was a flying bug at first. Then as it persisted, I looked to see what was going on. Large black ants were everywhere. I began to move and they began to bite. We said good night very quickly, dropping our conversation.

By the time that I got back inside into the light, I had eight, or more, bites and burn and ouch, and some swelling. I got into the pool for a while. It helped a little. I left for DF's place (she had been babysitting and didn't attend. I was obliged). By the time I got there it was painful, attention getting and persistent. I lay in bed for at least another hour and more, until I could sleep. Black ants are miserable when they make a collective effort.
Jbee
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balead

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #21 on: July 04, 2015, 11:15:28 PM »
This thread has made me realise that I haven't been bitten/stung by any insect this year - except a bee I stood on, but that was my fault. That was painful for a few days!
Dave

reubenT

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #22 on: July 06, 2015, 07:44:34 PM »
we have several annoyances.   Horse flies of several varieties,  deer flies, ticks,  mosquitoes,  those are the main ones.  They can be seriously bothersome,  a relief when they are gone in cold weather,  but then it gets too cold to go about naked.  Only a short time in spring and fall when it's cooled enough to put the bugs to bed and we get warm enough days to enjoy the weather without them. 

  And then there are herbs and natural treatments to cure all the ailments that the bugs bring on, generally faster and cleaner with much less side effects than the chemical treatments.   Charcoal and clay (finer the texture the better, bentonite is best)    are two good drawing compounds that will pull poison out of bites rapidly,   English plantain and broad leaf plantain are weeds that have greater poison drawing effect than charcoal, they need to be pulverized and the pulp laid on for a poultice. They will even draw out the poison of a brown recluse spider.     Bruised cabbage leaves have plenty of effect as well.   Then there are some powerful herbs which taken internally will kill the bugs that cause illness without harming the good bacteria,  like wormwood,   (sweet annie)  which grow near us,   chaparral or creosote bush in the southwest.   The essence of black walnut is excellent for killing bag germs.    Almost anywhere there will be something that works well. 

Davie

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #23 on: July 07, 2015, 09:16:53 AM »
Most frightening experience was when I stopped at the top of a hill. I was naked and was eating a sandwich when I heard a buzzing sound looked up and saw a black cloud which turned out to be a swam of bees. I moved pretty quick I can tell you. Fortunatly after buzz around for a couple of minutes or so they buzzed off much to my relief.

I also got stung in a very tender place - right the end of my penis. Fortunately I had some cream to hand and all was well I only had a bit of swelling for a short period of time. The one and probably only occasion a cossie might have been useful!!


Davie

eyesup

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #24 on: July 07, 2015, 03:35:02 PM »
Yes, but then, do you wear it while hiking or try to scramble into it when needed?

Does this mean you were not carrying your clothes?

Duane

nuduke

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #25 on: July 07, 2015, 11:55:05 PM »
Ok Ok, hold on a minute!

Stuart & Karla - you have done much wild swimming and FRN, you are an utter inspiration to me and many others, and I imagined that you romped the wildernesses of Scotland free as birds and unencumbered by concerns such as pests and parasites or sunburn (that's Scotland for you!).  I now glean a worrying catenary of scary parasitic possibilities that seem to be of concern on any hike.  Is this so?

One of my dearest dreams is to go naked wild swimming which I have never had a chance to do so far* but I definitely will one day, in clear cold water in an isolated highland tarn or brook. And I will lie in heather, clover and meadow flowers in the sun and dry off.  Have I really got to worry about parasites and being strafed by horse flies? Or is chancing it a good bet?

How common are ticks in the uk? (A cousin went jogging in Richmond Park and got a couple of whopper tick bites because they pulled the little beggars off by hand). Am I in danger of getting that amoebic bug in my eye in any water?  How do you deal with ticks if you get one?  My understanding is you need a special extractor and not pull them off.  Is that more clutter to carry round on ones FRN as well as the sun block, insect repellent, garlic sandwiches and mosquito netting? 

Not so free Free Range if so encumbered by care.

John   

*I once went wild swimming but not naked, in a small lake in Spain in the company of water snakes and some other people.

nuduke

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #26 on: July 08, 2015, 12:05:03 AM »
Quote from: Karla
There's also been an article about a testicle-biting cousin of piranha caught in Paris. ....
Quote from: Mail Online
The Pacu is technically a vegetarian, but tends to be attracted to male genitalia for unknown reasons.
It's obvious - being vegetarians they mistake them for plums!  ;D

John

Karla

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #27 on: July 08, 2015, 12:06:14 AM »
Stuart & Karla - you have done much wild swimming and FRN, you are an utter inspiration to me and many others, and I imagined that you romped the wildernesses of Scotland free as birds and unencumbered by concerns such as pests and parasites or sunburn (that's Scotland for you!).  I now glean a worrying catenary of scary parasitic possibilities that seem to be of concern on any hike.  Is this so?

One of my dearest dreams is to go naked wild swimming which I have never had a chance to do so far* but I definitely will one day, in clear cold water in an isolated highland tarn or brook. And I will lie in heather, clover and meadow flowers in the sun and dry off.  Have I really got to worry about parasites and being strafed by horse flies? Or is chancing it a good bet?

How common are ticks in the uk? (A cousin went jogging in Richmond Park and got a couple of whopper tick bites because they pulled the little beggars off by hand). Am I in danger of getting that amoebic bug in my eye in any water?  How do you deal with ticks if you get one?  My understanding is you need a special extractor and not pull them off.  Is that more clutter to carry round on ones FRN as well as the sun block, insect repellent, garlic sandwiches and mosquito netting? 

Not so free Free Range if so encumbered by care.

It shouldn't stop you if you're careful. Parasites are scary but ticks can be warded off by eating lots of raw garlic (along with everyone else!), and if you check yourself over every night then you'll be fine. Most places don't have ticks and if they do then you won't necessarily get any. And if you do then you have 24 hours to pick them off if they have lyme disease (not all of them do). We got completely covered in hundreds of the little blighters once (literally hundreds and the small ones too) but we didn't get a single bite after picking them off.

As for the amoeba that eats your eyes, just don't get water in your eyes! Or mud. Or if you do then have some eye drops ready to clean them out. I can't talk about the brain eating amoeba that climbs up your nose though.

jbeegoode

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #28 on: July 08, 2015, 08:39:13 AM »
DF got a buzzing critter in her ear Sunday. It just flew in and never came out. It kept vibrating. I poured some hydrogen peroxide down the ear, but still no sign of the bug. She has been making less and less sense ever since...could it be a brain eater, slowly boring through to escape out the other ear? Or worse, one of those that lays eggs, babes chewing/tunneling in every direction?
We shall see...
Jbee
Barefoot all over, all over.

eyesup

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Re: Things that try eating you when out and about
« Reply #29 on: July 08, 2015, 05:49:43 PM »
Quote from: Karla
. . . ticks can be warded off by eating lots of raw garlic (along with everyone else!)
Karla, I hope you meant warding everyone else off and not eating everyone else!  ;)
I have heard elsewhere about the benefits of raw garlic. Couldn't hurt, especially if you like garlic. Yummm.

Quote from: Karla
I can't talk about the brain eating amoeba that climbs up your nose though.
Naegleria fowleri. It loves warm water. There are hot springs in this area with warning signs posted about this little bugger see here. Nasty, creepy and sad when you read about a young kid dying from it, when all he was doing was playing in the water.

Jbee, you might want to go to a quick care and have that checked. Even though the body has a defense for things getting in to your ear, bugs can carry parasites.

Duane