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Re: A Leech question

Fri 28 Dec, 2012 4:49 pm

Thanks colinm . I knew you were being lighthearted, just had a blank moment.

Seeing its moved onto techniques. Best way I know is the fingernails. They make excellent decapitators. A thumbnail pressed against the first finger and bingo.

Re: A Leech question

Fri 28 Dec, 2012 6:14 pm

Just rub them until they dislodge and then flick them at your walking companion. :-)

Re: A Leech question

Sat 29 Dec, 2012 12:41 pm

tasadam wrote:I managed to kill a few on a recent walk... Most effective kill method was scrape them onto the Simmerlite.


Leech stew. I wonder why Alexander Pearce never thought of that?

Re: A Leech question

Sat 29 Dec, 2012 3:17 pm

Why should Mr Alexander Pearce have thought of leech stew ? - much more quantity on thigh, rump, bicep, quad, rib, shoulder,calf.............

Paul.

Re: A Leech question

Wed 02 Jan, 2013 9:09 am

Salt seams to work pretty well - it makes them shrivel up, drop off and then vomit up all your blood!

Re: A Leech question

Wed 02 Jan, 2013 11:16 am

I hate the little devils. I get a nasty reaction from them that takes a month to heal.

I never forget the time I hiked the Coastal Track at the Royal National Park, on the 2nd day it rained and all hell broke loose, I never seen so many leeches in my life. At one stage I had 60 of the little buggers on each leg.
The train ride back to Sydney was interesting. I had a couple leeches I missed, was sitting on the tram when I looked down and there was a couple of big juicy full of blood leeches crawling in the tram. You should have seen the look on the other passengers. :lol:
There was this trail of blood leading from my foot up the middle of the tram. My nephew joined me on the hike, I don't think he will ever do it again, he never seen or heard of them before, he told me when he went looking for a toilet on the tram, a few carriages down was about 4 rangers and there was leeches all over the floor, he said it looked like a blood bath.

Re: A Leech question

Thu 03 Jan, 2013 8:44 am

Roll on RID seems to work round here. Round the cuff of the boot or gaiters or your socks they dont seem to come over.
At night they hit the line you wipe round the mesh of the tent inner and drop off.
It probably weighs too much for ultralighters though.

RID.jpg
RID.jpg (5.76 KiB) Viewed 7315 times

Re: A Leech question

Thu 03 Jan, 2013 9:24 am

On an OT trip a few weeks ago one of my group took this photo. The little flying thingies seemed to be attracted to it. :-o

But yeah, worth a try against leeches.

image.jpg

Re: A Leech question

Thu 03 Jan, 2013 3:27 pm

Phillipsart wrote:I hate the little devils. I get a nasty reaction from them that takes a month to heal.

I never forget the time I hiked the Coastal Track at the Royal National Park, on the 2nd day it rained and all hell broke loose, I never seen so many leeches in my life. At one stage I had 60 of the little buggers on each leg.
The train ride back to Sydney was interesting. I had a couple leeches I missed, was sitting on the tram when I looked down and there was a couple of big juicy full of blood leeches crawling in the tram. You should have seen the look on the other passengers. :lol:
There was this trail of blood leading from my foot up the middle of the tram. My nephew joined me on the hike, I don't think he will ever do it again, he never seen or heard of them before, he told me when he went looking for a toilet on the tram, a few carriages down was about 4 rangers and there was leeches all over the floor, he said it looked like a blood bath.

What a seriously funny story....the thought of it....... :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:

Re: A Leech question

Thu 03 Jan, 2013 4:50 pm

Miyata610 wrote:On an OT trip a few weeks ago one of my group took this photo. The little flying thingies seemed to be attracted to it


Entomologist friend of mine told me that DEET works by interfering with insects' ability to home-in on CO2.

Re: A Leech question

Thu 03 Jan, 2013 8:54 pm

colinm wrote:... ability to home-in on CO2.

I knew that was what mozzies do, but I'm pretty sure leeches are attracted to a heat source, like, when you see them sticking up in mid air like a vertical stick, and you wave your hand over them, watch them go mad, then put your hand to one side and see them go into "seek and attack" mode, and watch how fast they can move!
Mind you, be careful that the 7 or 8 that you didn't see haven't latched on from behind while you were playing........ :shock:

Re: A Leech question

Mon 07 Jan, 2013 7:56 am

geoskid wrote:PPS - If the science becomes too hard or bothersome, make something up - works for theologians.


The "Flying Spaghetti Monster" was first described in a satirical open letter written by Bobby Henderson in 2005 to protest the Kansas State Board of Education decision to permit teaching intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in public school science classes (Wikipedia)
http://www.venganza.org/about/open-letter/

Pastafarianism
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flying_Spaghetti_Monster

You can get awesome T-shirts http://www.cafepress.com.au/mf/53643509/_tshirt
http://www.cafepress.com.au/mf/51838860/_tshirt
http://www.cafepress.com.au/mf/49375191/fsm-fish_tshirt
http://www.cafepress.com.au/mf/39316967 ... ate_tshirt
(sorry, got carried away there)

And hats..... http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-14135523

Anyway, back on topic.....

I've always used salt on them, and then burn them with a match (a Simmerlite may be slight overkill)
And RID on socks and legs - doesn't completely stop them though
I get annoyed by the length of time it takes to stop bleeding. They inject an anticoagulant and an anesthetic agent (haven't looked it up so don't know the details)
Does anyone know of any particular diseases or pathogens they can spread?

Re: A Leech question

Mon 07 Jan, 2013 9:07 am

Does anyone know of any particular diseases or pathogens they can spread

Bdellophobia
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