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.
tasadam wrote:I managed to kill a few on a recent walk... Most effective kill method was scrape them onto the Simmerlite.
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.![]()
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.
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
colinm wrote:... ability to home-in on CO2.
geoskid wrote:PPS - If the science becomes too hard or bothersome, make something up - works for theologians.
Does anyone know of any particular diseases or pathogens they can spread
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