Tick-mageddon on Mantario Trail overwhelms experienced hikers - Action News
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Manitoba

Tick-mageddon on Mantario Trail overwhelms experienced hikers

Four friends say they pulled off about 400 ticks off their clothes and skin during a three-day camping trip along the Mantario Trail last weekend.

Campers estimate they removed 400 ticks off clothing, skin during 3-day trip

Hikers pick off ticks during 3-day trek on Mantario Trail

7 years ago
Duration 0:31
Video courtesy of Karis Penner.

Silently they scurried. Up inside pant legs, down under shirt collars and behind ears.

The ticks kept coming, dozens and dozens of them, each driven by an unrelenting thirst for blood.

"Even now, I still touch my hair. I feel a little crawly thing on my skin I'm still checking today. You still think they're on you," saidKaris Penner, three days after a hike along the Mantario Trail with her husband and two friends.

A group of four hikers say they removed about 400 ticks from their clothing and skin on a recent three-day trip along the Mantario Trail. (Karis Penner)

The onslaught of tiny creepers got worse and worse as the group travelled north on the rugged trail last weekend. The Mantario is a 60-kilometre backcountry path that winds alongside the Ontario border in Whiteshell Provincial Park.

They landed on 400 as a fair estimateforthe approximate number of ticks they encountered, said Penner, an avid hiker and paddler fromSt-Pierre-Jolys, Man.

"The ones that were actually stuck to our skin was way less just because we were checking so much, but off our clothingI mean, easily 400 off our clothing," she said.

Every 10 or 15 minutes, when the group would stop for water or a snack, they'd get to work brushing off ticks from their clothes and gear.

Typically, she said, they'd find about 20 ticks on each break. The bugs especially liked hiding in the seams of convertible pants (pants that can turn into shorts by removing the lower section of the leg).

They joked about putting them all in a Ziplocbag but no one wantedthe job of holding it.

On all herbackcountrytrips,Pennerhasnever seen ticks that bad.

"We were just overwhelmed. We were taking them off as much as we could," she said. "After we washed in the evening and put clean clothes on, still they were on us."

Risk ofLymedisease low

While everyone got bites, Penner isn't too concerned about the risk of Lyme disease, which can be transmitted to humans by ticks.She said they checked each other for tick bites at least once a day and caught them before theylatched for too long.

Earlier this month, a Lymedisease awareness group warned that this could be a bad year for ticks.

The mild winter temperatures gave mice and other small animals achance to flourish, boosting the number of meals for ticks to feast on.

The Mantario Trail is a 60-kilometre hike along the Ontario border in Whiteshell Provincial Park. (Karis Penner)

However, while there are more blood-suckers creeping around, they may not necessarily be the species of tick that carries Lyme.

Based on the province's surveillance program, the vast majority of ticks collected in Manitoba are the common wood tick, a bug that does not carry Lyme, anaplasmosis or babesiosis, or any other problem disease, the province said.

Wood ticks, also known as the American dog tick, can be difficult to tell apart from problem deer ticks or blacklegged ticks, which can carry Lymedisease.

For that reason, Manitoba's medical officer of health for communicable disease control, Dr. Richard Rusk, recommends that anyone active outdoors check themselves at least once a day for ticks and remove them as quickly as possible.

"If you can catch that tick within a few hours of it being on you, even if it's bitten you it hasn't had the opportunity to get that bacteria regurgitated out and back into you," he said.

"There's good science to show that that works."

In Manitoba, people cansubmit a photo of atick onlinefor Rusk's office to review and determine if it is a blacklegged tick.

'They're strong little guys'

If you end up feeling any potential Lyme symptoms, like a rash or flu symptoms,it's a good idea to mention to your doctor whether you had any recent tick bites, said Rusk.

Last year, 62 people in Manitoba reported contracting Lyme disease, an illness spread by ticks. (Bertrand Guay/AFP/Getty Images)

In 2016, there were 62 cases of reportedLymedisease in Manitoba. Of those, 22 were confirmed, 28 were probably cases and 12 are still under investigation, according to data from Manitoba Health. Other tick-borne illnesses include 17 cases of reportedanaplasmosisand one case ofbabesiosisin 2016.

As forPenner, she's still battling the ticks, days after the trip ended.

Even after doing laundry, she's still finding the crittersin her home on piles of laundry and even in a cupboard.

"They're strong little guys. They're hard to get rid of," she said.

"You'll check yourself and then you'll look again 30 seconds later and there's one on your stomach again. Like, I don't understand where they come from."

For May long weekend, she plans to do her camping in Ontario.