View allAll Photos Tagged ticks
The clocks going forward makes the 4L79 15.40 Wilton-Felixstowe inter-modal service a possibility for photographers south of York. With the evening shadows lengthening, 66 588 passes Bishop Wood on the East Coast Main Line (Apple Mac touch-up). @18.21
Program technician Elizabeth Smith with the interactive tick locator map she helped create. A citizen science project led by Division of Agriculture entomologists Ashley Dowling and Kelly Loftin resulted in an interactive map that shows the distribution of tick species around Arkansas and the tick-borne disease pathogens identified in each location. (UA System Division of Agriculture photo by Fred Miller)
It was a tiny deer tick, so I even paid a local clinic to tell me I didn't need to worry about it, yet.
Doctor seemed confident that if it was in me for less than 20 hours or so (likely there for <7hrs), It would likely not have given me lyme disease.
Photo by We Run Huntsville - Joey and I ran the whole 15+ miles together :) Since he's faster than me, we usually say good luck at the start and then he's waiting for me at the finish line. Glad I had a running buddy for this race...I needed it!
This is the first and only time I've ever found ticks on a harvestman. Taken back in 2007, this was a very early effort at macro shooting with my first DSLR, a new Nikon D40. I was just beginning to experiment with reverse mounting objectives from broken lenses onto the front of the normal camera lens. The combination used here was the Nikon's kit lens, an 18-55mm, with the front lens cell from an Underground Camera 135mm lens. This particular add-on was the first I came up with, and was absolutely the "kiss of death" when trying to get a sharp image. The complete lens might have been OK, but the front element used as a stacker was a very poor optical match for the 18-55mm. Every other objective I've tried was far better, with the majority being tack sharp. The Underground 135mm front cell was a dog, quickly retired from photography, now used as a loupe.
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Louis Goss - Watchmaker - A dying breed - a master watchmaker who can repair and service vintage analogue watches.
Research technician Renee Kong breaks cell samples in order to extract DNA that may identify pathogens carried by ticks. A citizen science project led by Division of Agriculture entomologists Ashley Dowling and Kelly Loftin resulted in an interactive map that shows the distribution of tick species around Arkansas and the tick-borne disease pathogens identified in each location. (UA System Division of Agriculture photo by Fred Miller)
One of a few poor attempts to capture this little git which attached itself to me up Eston Hills. Luckily it was only stuck to my leg hair, Horrible little blighter!
This is another picture from my nostalgia photo assignment.
This is my dad's old pocketwatch, and yes, it still works.
Hate to gross you out so I'll follow this with some flowers. My daughter found this tick on her arm following a couple of days of deep woods camping. Fortunately it hadn't burrowed into her skin yet, so I gladly took the time to photograph it before doing the necessary extraction. He was clamped on pretty hard.