File :-(, x, )
Anonymous
this was on my foot
>> Anonymous
Ick. Remove with tweezers.
>> Frankengun !HgIdo42VU2
The spot on it's back means it's a deer tick. They carry Lyme's disease. Be careful removing it, and watch the area for a few days afterward for skin irritation resembling a red bullseye.

This is how I dealt with the last tick I found on me:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=noQrVFvksHE
>> Ragnaros the Firelord
PURGE IT WITH FIRE!
not joking take a lit cigar to the fucker.
>> Frankengun !HgIdo42VU2
>>264009
DON'T DO THAT
>> Anonymous
I remember our house getting infested with ticks and found one latched onto my leg. Luckily, they're super easy to pull without risk of leaving their head behind if they haven't "buried" into you yet. He just bit me and was about to get down to business when I pulled him off with some tweezers.
>> Frankengun !HgIdo42VU2
>>264020
Still, better keep an eye on the contact area for a bit.
>> Anonymous
i wish tiny things werent so harmful. what if one crawled on me when i was sleeping. id be fucked.
>> Anonymous
>>264474
Happened to me last week. Woke up because my thigh was itching, went to scratch it, felt the fucker and yanked him off and flushed him. Don't think he got a chance to dig in.
>> Anonymous
Here's some good news: usually tickborn diseases won't infect you unless the tick has been attached to you for about 24 hours. So while it's good to be wary of any symptoms of sickness after a tick bite, you'll usually be fine if you remove it the same day it bites.
>> Anonymous
>>264003

1. Take lighter.
2. Put lighter to tick.
3. Burn.
4. Stick foot into pre-prepared pail of water once the fire gets close to your skin.
5. ????
6. PROFIT