Hamilton Herald Masthead

Editorial


Front Page - Friday, June 27, 2014

Scratching ain’t polite


Read All About It



Pettus L. Read

I heard a story the other day, over at Sewell’s, about one of our Tennessee cousins having one of our other cousins from Texas come and visit recently.

It seems cousin Tex, who’s very well off, climbed into the passenger seat of Cousin Harley’s old rusty pickup truck and headed out to take a look around at what was growing on the Tennessee rock farm Harley is proud to call his own.

From the very beginning of the trip, Cousin Tex could only expound upon the size of his Texas holdings, and Cousin Harley was soon getting a total “fed-up-ness” of his proudness.

When the truck went by a field of Jersey dairy heifers, Tex asked, “What are those?”

Harley said proudly, “Those are the best Jersey replacement dairy heifers you’ll find east of the Mississippi River. Their production history will be second to none.”

“Why, we have deer on my ranch bigger than those under-fed things,” Tex said, as he puffed on a huge cigar.

The truck now approached a large pond located between two beautiful green valleys that would be the envy of any good farmer. “What kind of fish do you have in that little mud hole,” Tex said with a snicker.

“That’s my spring fed pond that provides water for our entire herd, and has some of the largest bass you’ve ever seen,” Harley said, trying to outdo his cousin.

“Well, if that’s all you can do, you need to build something larger,” Cousin Tex said. “If you were in Texas, you’d have to fill it in due to it being a mosquito hazard.”

Harley had just about had all that he could take when, just as he made a turn onto the farm’s dirt road, he had to stop for a large snapping turtle sitting in the middle of the road. The turtle was a big one and about as mean looking as anything you’ve seen.

“What in the world is that?” Tex asked, in a somewhat shocked manner.

Harley saw his chance to win the “whose is bigger” contest, and said, “Oh, don’t worry about that. You act like you’ve never seen a Tennessee tick before.”

With the current hot and dry weather we’re having, Tennessee ticks might not have the chance to grow as large as the one Harley showed to his Texas cousin, but they’re really hungry about now and looking for a meal. Tall grass and weeds are prime places to encounter their presence, so try to remain in paths, lanes, and clearings. Yards can be kept clear of these unwanted visitors by mowing weekly. They carry dangerous diseases, and this time of the year, ticks are no laughing matter, so please take precautions.

Another group of pests (without legs) gaining a lot of attention these warm days is poison ivy, poison oak, and poison sumac. I’ve never experienced their itchiness, and seem to not be allergic to urushiol oil, the sticky, resin-like substance found inside the plants. But I do respect them, and try to avoid handling them unless I have on gloves and long sleeves.

Bayer Advanced, a business group of Bayer CropScience LP and part of the Bayer AG family, says half the U.S. population is allergic to urushiol oil. But they also say it’s not just the allergy to urushiol that’s a problem — it’s how potent it is.

They say it takes only 1 billionth of a gram of the oil to cause a rash. That’s not much oil to cause the distress that comes from it getting on your skin. One trip in the forest could cause 500 people to itch from the amount that would fit on the head of a pin. And, urushiol oil can stay active on any surface for up to five years, even on dead plants.

The Bayer group says you can take control of poison ivy, poison oak, and poison sumac before they take over your yard and farms by keeping your lawn and fence line clear and trimmed, and cutting back the undesirable plants to ground level every time you see green growth.

There are brush killers in concentrate form available from Bayer that kills the brush down to the roots so it won’t come back. I’ve tried it, and it does work. Some other brush killers kill back the vines but don’t kill the roots. Before you know it, you’re spraying again.

It even controls kudzu. If it’ll kill kudzu, the plant that ate the South, it will surely help get rid of the itchy stuff as well.

Avoid the Tennessee ticks, kill the plants that contain urushiol, and enjoy an itch-free summer. Itching often comes at the most inopportune times and in the strangest places.

Pettus L. Read writes for the Tennessee Farm Bureau Federation. He may be contacted by e-mail at pettusr60@gmail.com.