EVEN THE TICKS ARE VANISHING


EVEN THE TICKS ARE VANISHING  The reports continue to come in from around the world. The billions of mobile devices and the 9,000 satellites are rapidly replacing the bugs, birds and beasts of the Earth.
Patricia writes from Missouri: “I have been living in rural southwest Missouri for the last 25 years without a mobile phone. When I bought my home in 2005, the soil on the lot was extremely poor and very compacted from having been driven over with riding mowers for many years. I wanted to bring it back and turn my whole yard into a ‘food forest’. I started by sowing clover and cultivating the dandelions instead of trying to get rid of them as so many people do. After the clover started to blossom, I noticed it was being visited by thousands of bumblebees. I had so many hummingbirds that three feeders were needed to keep them from fighting for access. Mosquitoes were almost non-existent around my area. 
“At night I could see hundreds of bats flying around, and in spring the yard and whole area was filled with the peeping of little green tree frogs. They would perch along the rim of my swimming pool and lay their eggs in the water. (Note, the town does not chlorinate the water supply and I do not chlorinate the pool.) Every morning I would check the pool for their eggs and move them to a small pool that I set up just for the frogs, where I would feed the tadpoles and change the water as needed (keeping the tadpoles in buckets during the changes).
“After I had been living here for six years, the first cell tower was erected at the edge of town. Over the next few years, more towers went up, until the whole area was saturated with RF radiation. The town also used a federal grant to change all the electric meters to electronic ones and do away with the analog meters. Each year since, the number of bumblebees seemed to shrink by half, even though I still have the clover and dandelions. During the past 4-5 years, I could count the number of bumblebees on one hand. The last two years I’ve seen only one or two per YEAR. The hummingbirds are totally gone. I used to find their nests in the fall when thinning.
“Worst of all is the complete annihilation of the tree frogs. Even friends who live out in the sticks and have ponds on their property have noticed the recent “silent spring” phenomenon. Speaking of silent springs: It used to be nearly impossible to sleep past dawn with the windows open in spring, summer and fall here due to the enormous numbers of songbirds that produced a daily morning and evening symphony. Their numbers have declined to the point where I have to actively listen for them in order to hear them at all.
“I could go on about the diminished numbers of butterflies, crickets, praying mantises, spiders and earthworms I’ve observed. The declines are not limited to the smaller critters; there used to always be cottontail rabbits in the yard, and I haven’t seen one of them in recent years. I have lost more pets to cancer since 2010 than I care to count. There aren’t even any mice anymore! My personal health has declined severely as well. At the same time there have been notable increases in the numbers of mosquitoes, chiggers and ticks — to the point where it is miserable spending a few minutes outside.”
Birds and spiders eat ticks and chiggers. Birds and bats eat mosquitoes. So mosquitoes, chiggers and ticks, being hardy, multiply when their predators are gone. But not for long:
Marie writes from Sweden: “Even the ticks are gone in some areas.”
Daniel writes from Los Angeles: “I hardly see any moths anymore.”
Sonya writes from Surrey, England: “Last year I only had two large flies in the house and both died within a few hours. When I was a teenager in the Midlands during the 1950s, I couldn’t open my bedroom window during the hot summers because there were banks of midges swarming under the eaves; even here in Surrey five years or so ago, there used to be a few midges around inside the house during a hot evening. I saw none last year.”
Renee write from the UK: “For the last 3 years, we’ve seen fewer and fewer bees, butterflies and other pollinators. This last growing season we saw only a few bees or butterflies — hardly any insects at all!”
Robert writes from Austria: “I worked for 30 years in a large hospital in Vienna. There I worked with the air conditioning systems. They were very large and had correspondingly large filters. When I first worked there in the ‘90s, we had to sweep up all sorts of flies under the external filters. A 110 liter plastic bag was pretty much full. 30 years later there are only a few hand shovels full (approximately 20 liters) to sweep up. The continuous decline of insects has really shocked me. 
The e-radiation decimates the insects so much. It is the worst massacre in the world. It finally has to stop.”
Marianna writes from Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada: “There are new 5G cell phone antennas put onto an apartment house here with a giant crane. It’s a room of antennas on two buildings near me and I am suffering!
“There are very few songbirds or robins, no skylarks, no sparrows, fewer ducks and Barrow’s goldeneyes, fewer crows, etc. Also, there have been no flowers on bushes or fruit produced as in the past. I have watched a fig tree produce fruit in 2022 only to see the fruit harden and shrivel at harvest time as all the leaves cascaded to the ground at once. This year I watched again and actually got a few handfuls of figs but watched the majority shrivel and harden and the leaves fall in one swoop before fall! It’s devastating and almost no one sees or cares. There are few bumblebees and zero honey bees. My son does art work on the demise of bees! Harmony Arts Festival, West Vancouver.”
Nat writes from Newcastle, Australia: “There is now a noticeable decrease in insects in our region, even flies and mosquitoes. At this time of year flies and mossies are a pest and appear in great numbers but not this year. I could count the number of flies I see each day on one hand and I have yet to see a mosquito. Spiders are a rarity in the garden now and should be abundant. Five years ago I had an accident and couldn’t drive for several months. A pair of finches took the opportunity to build a nest outside of the garage, under the house, and continued to breed there until this year. There were thirty-four finches sitting on the power lines earlier this year but they seem to have gone. What have we done to the planet?
Howell writes from Thailand: “I went to Penang, Malaysia. In the evening I could hear an insect sound but then realised it was coming from only one place. I looked and saw it was coming from a loudspeaker. In the day the hotel played bird sounds because there are so few birds and insects now.
“Back in my hometown about an hour from Bangkok I realised the same thing was happening, no mosquitoes, very very few cockroaches, no ants, et cetera et cetera.
“This morning I was shocked and saddened by seeing only one House Martin from the 8 nests on the wall below my window. That they have actually survived for so long is remarkable because there is so little food for them–so few insects. The colony has been there for years. One day I noticed a House Martin on the ground that could not fly because its wings had been mutated and were too wide.
“I also saw a squashed 5-legged frog on a walk. I cut down my walking because noticing the lack of insects was very upsetting. There are urban birds like sparrows and pigeons but even their numbers seem to be declining.
“It is good to see people around the world waking up to what is happening. Locals here are happy there are no more mosquitoes and very very few cockroaches. They do not realise what is causing it and they do not care.”
Bob writes from England: “I am very old and have always been a naturalist and observer of changes in the world of nature. In the past two decades, I have noticed the decline of butterflies especially those which migrate from France to England, and the absence of insects on the car windscreen. On our farmland we always had a strong rabbit population which soon picked up after the myxi [myxomatosis] decimation, but now I rarely see one. In past years in the spring at night we would have hundreds of Maybugs (cockchavers) flying into our house windows; I have not seen one for years. 
“The work you are doing is essential as you know, our natural wildlife has been my life, several years ago I concluded that we had even then lost some seventy percent of it. We humans are a part of that wildlife. Since the introduction of atomic weapons our future has never been certain, but this is far more subtle and I believe threatening.”
Barbara writes from Québec, Canada: “I noticed a decline in the insects, birds and creepy crawly things after a cell phone tower went up behind our family’s home over 20 years ago. After two years, seven of our neighbors had died from cancers and heart attacks and all the animal life vanished. The June bugs died in the ground. It is too sad to remember or recount all that we experienced while living there during that time as it was a time of pure evil and torture.”
Author, poet and journalist Sean Arthur Joyce writes from Canada: “Today in our community in southeastern British Columbia is our local Christmas Bird Count. The results are positively eerie: hardly a bird to be found, and we live in a mountainous region that is at least 100 kilometres from the nearest major city. I’ve noticed just over the past couple of months that the birds coming to the feeder have plummeted. Where before, we had daily, regular visits from a dozen or so chickadees and nuthatches all through the year, this has dropped to the occasional pair only once or twice a week. At first I chalked this up to the squirrel monopolizing the feeder for a while, but since he stopped doing that the bird count has still not increased.
“Given how far we are from a major city, and the fact that we have no 5G here (though we do have 4G cell service in some areas, but it doesn’t work outside the villages), I’m assuming we may be experiencing radiation from the Starlink satellites even in this semi-remote, rural area.
“We’re going into a solar maximum cycle in 2024 (actually it has already started) according to scientists, which has already resulted in a flare affecting radio transmissions around the world. More are predicted in the coming months. There are days I pray we get such a major blast of solar flares from the sun that it knocks out ALL of the satellites.
“Of course, that would knock us back about 200 years but maybe that’s the only way we’ll see a return of the bird life.”
Maya writes from San Francisco: “My second-floor porch is at the bottom of a Prevailing North Wind funnel, that blows across the dozen backyards, that create the green space interior of our block. The south side of the porch is open to the sky, between buildings on either side that are much taller, creating the wind funnel, and at least a constant breeze.
“When I first moved here four decades ago, I often counted 20 or 30 birds and many bees and butterflies every day. They stopped by the plants I set out for them on the porch as they flew both north and south. Now I only see one or two small birds a week scurrying across the porch floor. But never any bees, and maybe one or two small white butterflies a week. Beginning five or six years ago, I’ve walked the same path in Golden Gate Park several times a week, and counted 50 or 60 Canadian Geese every time. Now, maybe there are 15 or 20 of them. And all the various ducks and hawks are rarely seen. And the glorious breath-taking seasonal Blue Herons are gone.
“Also now, there is a 5G tower more than 500 feet away, at eye level with the porch and my desk window. I spent a small fortune on EMF shielding screens for the desk area windows that look out on the porch. But they only shield 80% of the radiation. Lately I’ve noticed that when I must be at the computer for several hours, the left side of my face by the window, is red.”
Henrik writes from Sweden: “I have seen the same thing happen here in Sweden with the insects. The crane fly and the wasp are gone. In my filled compost bucket there was not a single fruit fly in July and August. Flies and butterflies have also decreased.”
Josephine writes from California:  “All of my ants are gone. No rising population of ants rescuing eggs when I water my roses. No little house cleaners coming in for jelly left on the counter in the kitchen. None coming in during the rain.”

Ticks Hate This More Than Chemicals and It’s Not Toxic


The weather is quickly warming up, and dog and cat parents across the U.S. are wondering what to expect over the next few months when it comes to pests that pester their pets.

The Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) predicts the following tick-borne disease risk areas for 2016:1

tick season

Story at-a-glance

  • Warm weather is upon us, which means that in most parts of the U.S., pests will soon be upon your pets
  • Lyme-carrying ticks have expanded their range, and cases of the tick-borne diseases anaplasmosis, ehrlichiosis and babesiosis are expected to increase
  • One of the reasons tick-borne illness is on the rise is that ticks have developed a resistance to pesticides
  • Giving pets ever-stronger doses of toxic pesticides on a monthly basis year-round is not a guarantee against tick-borne illness. Many dogs vaccinated for Lyme disease and who are also on monthly chemical preventives are still acquiring tick-borne infections
  • Avoiding tick-infested areas, checking your dog daily for ticks, and having his blood checked every six months is the most common sense, safe, and non-toxic approach to keeping him free from potentially devastating tick-borne diseases
  • Ticks that transmit Lyme disease have expanded their range and become established in Illinois, Iowa, Indiana and Kentucky. However, New England, which has traditionally been in the “bulls-eye of Lyme disease,” is forecasted to see below normal activity.
  • Texas, Oklahoma and Missouri are expected to have higher than normalehrlichiosis activity. Increased risk is also forecast for southern California and throughout the southeast, especially east of the Mississippi River.
  • Ticks that transmit anaplasmosis are expected to be a problem in northern California, New York state, western Pennsylvania and West Virginia.

The CAPC also forecasts the number of heartworm infections to be above average nationwide, with expansion from the lower Mississippi River region into eastern Missouri, southern Illinois, and southern Indiana.

If you’d like information about the risk of tick-borne diseases in your area, take a look at the CAPC’s Parasite Prevalence Maps. The maps are broken down by disease, by dog or cat, by state, and by county.

Increased Use of Chemical Pest Preventives Isn’t the Answer

While the CAPC website is a great information resource, it’s important to note that veterinary drug manufacturers sponsor the council.2 As a result, you’ll find a recurring theme throughout the site of “Every Pet, All Year Long.”

This is a one-size-fits-all recommendation I don’t agree with that involves year-round chemical preventives for every dog and cat, without regard to where the animal lives, when pest season starts and ends, whether a given disease is prevalent in a given species, and with no acknowledgment that ticks have developed resistance to pesticides thanks to decades of overuse.

Every year I see canine patients who have been given monthly doses of pesticides for years, yet turn up positive for tick-borne illness, including many dogs with Lyme disease that have been vaccinated against it.

The fact is that pest preventives and the reactive Lyme vaccine aren’t as fool-proof as most pet owners have been led to believe.

Why Tick-Borne Disease Is Now so Common in Dogs

There are several reasons for the epidemic of tick-borne diseases we’re experiencing across the U.S. First of all, ticks are resilient little parasites. They were once only a problem in certain areas of the country, but now they are found across the U.S., which means they’re expanding their turf.

There’s also the problem of pesticide resistance in ticks. For the last 50 years, we’ve seen progressively more toxic options for tick control. Dogs are getting monthly doses of chemicals year after year, yet they’re still testing positive for tick-borne diseases.

Although chemical preventives may reduce the sheer number of ticks that attach to a dog, the ticks that do attach still carry disease.

It’s a given the pesticides we’re applying at unprecedented rates to our dogs are causing resistance in parasites, and yet they are not one hundred percent effective at preventing tick attachment or disease transmission.

Another reason tick-borne diseases are on the rise is that insects other than ticks — specifically mosquitoes — have been found to transmit some of these potentially lethal infections.

One Tick Bite Can Transmit Multiple Tick-Borne Diseases

Ticks pick up pathogens from infected wildlife. In the case of Lyme and babesiosis, mice and chipmunks are the primary reservoirs. Ticks that attach to these animals are much more likely to be co-infected, according to one recent study.3

Some of the ticks sampled for the study were infected with three pathogens — Lyme, babesiosis, and anaplasmosis. According to the study’s co-author, Richard Ostfeld, Ph.D. of the Cary Institute of Ecosystem Studies:

“Mice and other small mammals are often particularly abundant in habitats that have been fragmented or degraded by human activity. That means these patterns of co-infection might get worse through time as humans continue to impact forest ecosystems.”4

The study authors warn that people living in tick-infested areas of the country, including the northeast, mid-Atlantic, and upper Midwest, are potentially vulnerable to exposure to two or three diseases from a single tick bite. The public and health care providers need to be on the lookout for the possibility of multiple infections.

I would add the same warning applies to pets living in those areas as well. Fortunately, the SNAP 4Dx Plus and the Accuplex4 tests screen for heartworm, Lyme disease, and two strains each of ehrlichia and anaplasma, but they don’t pick up Babesia.

So I would recommend that pets living in tick-infested areas who test positive on the SNAP 4Dx Plus or the Accuplex4 also be screened for Babesia exposure. The best way to detect exposure to this parasite is with a PCR (polymerase chain reaction) test that checks for the presence of Babesia DNA.

Remember, if your pet tests positive for exposure, it’s important to follow up with the Quantitative C6 (QC6) test, which differentiates exposure from infection.

I see dozens of dogs each year unnecessarily treated with extensive antibiotic therapy because their veterinarian panicked after seeing a positive exposure. Please don’t let your vet do this!

Up to 90 percent of dogs on the east coast may have exposure to these pathogens, but to know if the body is actively fighting an infection, a QC6 must be performed. Thankfully, most dogs’ immune systems fight off these infections all on their own.

But for the unlucky dogs who can’t fight off these infections, the sooner we identify them, the sooner we can devise a treatment plan. This is why I recommend that my clients living in endemic areas test their pets every six months.

While only certain laboratories run this type of testing, it is really the best method for confirming a Babesia infection.

Preventing a Tick-Borne Infection in Your Pet

Check for ticks daily, and don’t overlook areas of your pet’s body where ticks can hide, like between the toes, the underside of the toes, in the earflaps and around the tail base.

Research demonstrates that ticks must be attached to your dog for at least 24 hours in order for most disease-causing bacteria to be transmitted from the tick to your pet. That’s why daily tick checks and removing ticks immediately are a huge part of reducing your dog’s risk of acquiring a tick-borne disease.

If you prefer to err on the side of extreme caution, you can check your pet for ticks each time he may have been exposed (in other words, each time he visits an area outdoors that may harbor ticks). This is hands-down the safest and entirely non-toxic method of tick prevention.

Use natural tick deterrents. There are dozens on the market, and although none of them will prevent 100 percent of tick bites 100 percent of the time, they may make your dog a less desirable target. Reducing the number of ticks on your dog by 50 to 80 percent is most certainly better than nothing, in my opinion.

Focus on creating a healthy body. Unhealthy bodies tend to be over-parasitized. Healthy animals may have an occasional tick, but creating a vibrantly strong immune system through a balanced, fresh food diet, titering, and minimizing chemical exposure will help keep your pet safe.

If you find a tick on your dog, be sure to remove it correctly. Don’t use your bare hands because you can become infected by handling or crushing an infected tick. Wear gloves, or even better, use a tick-removing tool.

Grasp the tick very close to your pet’s skin with a tick removal tool or a pair of tweezers. Carefully pull the tick’s body away from the skin. Once it’s off, flush it down the toilet. Then disinfect your dog’s skin with soapy water or diluted povidone iodine (Betadine). I also recommend applying a drop of lavender oil to the bite.

Monitor the attachment site for the next few days. If you notice any irritation or inflammation of the skin, contact your veterinarian.

Have your dog tested for tick-borne diseases no earlier than three to four weeks after removing a tick. The type of test to ask your veterinarian for is the SNAP 4Dx or Accuplex4 test, which is a screening blood test. If you don’t have the 4Dx or Accuplex test done, you’ll want to watch your dog closely for several months for any signs of loss of appetite, lethargy, change in gait, fever, intermittent limping — all the symptoms of potential tick-borne disease.

And keep in mind that waiting until a dog exhibits symptoms isn’t the most proactive approach. I have found tick-borne diseases substantially harder to treat once a dog is overtly ill. The period of subclinical infection (when the dog has no symptoms) is when integrative practitioners see excellent treatment success.

Checking your dog externally for ticks and having his blood checked regularly (I recommend every six months) for silent infections is the very best approach to keeping your pet safe from potentially devastating tick-borne diseases.