The Tick
There is one downside to living on a nice wooded lot in North Carolina. Getting ready for bed last night, I found this girl munching on my leg:

She is safely preserved (and, apparently endowed by her vampiric nature with indestructibility and immortality, still alive) in a Ziploc baggie should I come down with anything in the next few weeks.
I have to say I'm amazed by what I can do with this $60 Epson scanner (model 3490). I bought it to scan book covers for my librarything catalog, but the ability to scan at 4800dpi obviously has its uses, too.

She is safely preserved (and, apparently endowed by her vampiric nature with indestructibility and immortality, still alive) in a Ziploc baggie should I come down with anything in the next few weeks.
I have to say I'm amazed by what I can do with this $60 Epson scanner (model 3490). I bought it to scan book covers for my librarything catalog, but the ability to scan at 4800dpi obviously has its uses, too.
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Look for a red spot with a red ring around it, if you're worried about Lyme.
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*runs screaming*
I absolutely HATEHATEHATE ticks. Nasty, disgusting creatures with no ecological benefit whatsoever that I'm aware of. I don't like mosquitoes either, but I understand that lots of other critters -- bats, frogs, etc., feed on them, so that's at least something. But ticks? Ugh.
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And also, as Carl Zimmer has pointed out - predators are creatures that make their living by attacking and killing things smaller and weaker than they are, and yet we idolize them and name our cars after them.
Parasites live by daring to attack things far larger and stronger than they, and yet we revile them.
I say we make up for this bully-favoring and start naming sports cars after parasites. The Mitsubishi Tick! The Porsche Tapeworm! The Dodge Leech!
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That scanner is amazingly impressive, esp. given the cost.
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i hope you don't get sick!
icck, tick, sick...