Jane, et al. -- I haven't really been "brave" enough to try this, but I know a guy who swears that wearing shorts into the field works the best because you can then FEEL the little blighters when they're crawling on you and then take measure to remove them/do them in. In a way, this does make sense, because they don't bite right away. Secretly shuddering in tick-infested NH, Susan Fogleman -----Original Message----- From: Vermont Birds [mailto:[log in to unmask]] On Behalf Of Jane Stein Sent: Sunday, March 21, 2010 7:09 PM To: [log in to unmask] Subject: Re: [VTBIRD] Ticks Look at the label, etc., first. Mine may be a more primitive early version... I'm pretty sure, though, that the anti-tick stuff has a limited lifespan in the washing machine, though there may now be clothes that can take more than a dozen washes. Personally, I stay out of tall grass, wear the socks when I really need to go into tall grass-- and "go native," as you suggest! (Actually, the foot part is inside the shoe, so one can wash that and leave the part that goes up the leg be.) Jane Mundi Smithers wrote: > Oh dear ... perhaps I'll just 'go native' and not wash them ????? > > > > the anti-tick stuff doesn't last for more than a fairly limited number of > washings, I think with mine it's 12. > ) > > Mundi > Pownal >