The Woods

Show Only ...
Maps - Photos - Videos

Upstate NY black bear nuisance complaints rising due to drought, dry conditions | NewYorkUpstate.com

Upstate NY black bear nuisance complaints rising due to drought, dry conditions | NewYorkUpstate.com

"Carl Carmoney was camping recently at the Limekiln State Campground in Inlet early this month when he had a close encounter with a black bear. "

"I was sitting at our clean campsite starting a fire. It was going fine. My son was cooking dinner in the RV when an estimated 450-pound bear came lumbering up from behind me. He was about 20 feet from me. I got up, (quickly) put our car between him and me and entered the RV," he said of the Adirondack encounter."

"Carmoney said the bear "spent the better part of 3 or 4 hours wondering (his and nearby) campsites. "

"My 'spidey senses' were on overdrive and, that's an understatement. The bear approached our campsite four other times. We saw him (within 50 feet of us) one more time."

Don’t Touch! A Scientist’s Advice For Spotting Poison Ivy Before It Ruins Your Summer

Don’t Touch! A Scientist’s Advice For Spotting Poison Ivy Before It Ruins Your Summer

""Within 48 hours, I had your classic case of poison ivy on my arm. And as a scientist, I said, 'This is interesting, how bad can it be? I'll just leave this untreated,' " he recalls, sheepishly. "In about two weeks, I had learned just how uncomfortable poison ivy rash could be. Uncomfortable sounds like an understatement. Jelesko says he barely slept while fighting the urge to "claw my itching flesh off." Eventually, he went to his family doctor, who prescribed oral steroids. The experience sparked years of research into a plant he calls a "familiar stranger." He has studied the chemical, urushiol, that triggers that tell-tale rash, and the plant's biology overall. The tricky thing about avoiding poison ivy, Jelesko says, is the plant is highly adaptable and can take many different forms in different environments"

Picardin

Picardin is a next generation insect repellent designed to replace DEET. 🐜Invented in the 1980s, carefully studied for toxicity in the 1990s it became on the market in the United States in the early 2000s after first being approved in Europe first.

I stumbled upon an article a while back talking about the virtues of Picardin over the long standing insect repellent known as DEET. Unlike DEET it won’t stain most clothing, isn’t as greasy, doesn’t cause the same level of allergic reactions and actually smells fairly nice when first applied. Almost like an apple smell or maybe buttery popcorn.

I find Picardin takes somewhat longer to work then DEET but it’s a whole lot nicer to use, and doesn’t give me the annoying allergic reactions like tingling lips that sometimes I have with DEET. Supposedly Picardin is more effective at repelling ticks than DEET but I find it works well with mosquitoes and horse flies too but not so much black flies – which also aren’t that repealed by DEET.

Over the years I’ve bought many containers of DEET so I still use that to a certain extent, because I already have that on hand. But now my go to really is Picardin as it’s much more pleasant to use. Picardin is frequently sold as Repel Tick Defense at Walmart but I’m sure there are other brands out there.

 Weapons in the War On Black Flies