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Is this a tick?

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  • 07-29-2004, 12:51 AM
    Itmaymb
    I think my ball has a tick. Here is a picture, let me know what you think. It is right behind her head.
    https://ball-pythons.net/modules/cop...snaketick2.JPG
  • 07-29-2004, 12:54 AM
    Anonymous
    Is this a tick?
    Tick or injury, I think you still need to see the vet.
    I'm in West Palm Beach, Florida :)
  • 07-29-2004, 01:49 AM
    Ironhead
    Rubbermaid -
    With the grey color it sure look's like a tick engorged with blood, but not positive. I wouldnt force it, but try carefully with a toothpick or something similar to see if you can lift one end of the grey object up. If you can move it some, check to see if it has any legs. If it does, you could use tweezers to pull it out, just make sure you get close to the head of the tick (if it is a tick) and pull slowly trying to make sure the head comes out with it. A vet would also be a good idea to be on the safe side.
  • 07-29-2004, 01:52 AM
    Ironhead
    Also if you have a magnafying glass that would make it a lot easier to look at it.
  • 07-29-2004, 02:02 AM
    Ironhead
    Quote:

    I'm in West Palm Beach, Florida
    Blink....I have several cousins that live in West Palm Beach! Im originally from Eau Gallie/Melbourne and spent my teen years in Merritt Island Florida before moving to Illinois.
  • 07-29-2004, 03:15 AM
    Jeanne
    Once you confirm it is a tick, do not pull it out. You can either light a match, blow it out, touch it to the tick and it will back out on its own right away, or try putting alcohol in it..someone told me that works too.
  • 07-29-2004, 03:19 AM
    Anonymous
    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Ironhead
    Quote:

    I'm in West Palm Beach, Florida
    Blink....I have several cousins that live in West Palm Beach! Im originally from Eau Gallie/Melbourne and spent my teen years in Merritt Island Florida before moving to Illinois.


    I actually just moved from New York (Brooklyn) not so long ago.

    Quote:

    Originally Posted by Jeanne
    Once you confirm it is a tick, do not pull it out. You can either light a match, blow it out, touch it to the tick and it will back out on its own right away, or try putting alcohol in it..someone told me that works too.

    Err, I think its best if thats left for the vet to handle with.
  • 07-29-2004, 03:59 AM
    Brandon
    The alcohol trick works for removal, but you can't just pour it on. Get a cotton ball and pour some alcohol on that, then press it against the tick cutting off it's air supply. The tick should back out on it's own. THEN burn it with a match. Why burn it? Because ticks have such thin compressed bodies that trying to smash it will only leave it alive and you frustrated. I believe I heard the alcohol trick works because ticks breathe through their legs, sounds strange but I've heard stranger. Any scar left behind should clear up in a shed or two. In the meantime, apply bacitracin once a day.
    Good Luck
  • 07-29-2004, 09:09 AM
    Ginevive
    One gameplan for getting rid of ticks, is a good soak in some dish-soapy water. Just make sure the water is warm, not hot, and you may want to put a UTH under the Rubbermaid in which you soak the snake, to keep the water frrom cooling. I usually soak them for an hour or so, if I am checking for mites, but with the tick I'd look every few minutes to see if the little nasty has let go yet.
    Good luck; I had a snake with ticks, and I know how stressful it can be.
  • 07-29-2004, 09:31 AM
    Marla
    MY day is finally here!!
    It's almost certainly a tick, and suffocating it is a good way to get it to let go without doing any damage to the snake (obviously don't squeeze too tightly). In addition to alcohol, petroleum jelly makes a good agent of suffocation, but don't use both at the same time. Once the tick has let go, you're free to kill it in any way you see fit, including burning with a match head, pinning to your corkboard and letting it starve, dropping it in a nearby spiderweb, or zipping it in a baggie and dropping it off at the vet's office.
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