What makes ticks tick?

KENT — Youngsters of all ages got an in-depth look at ticks and other bugs at the Kent Memorial Library on Friday, April 25, when the library held its second-to-last program for April science month, “Ticks and Other Icks.�

Mike Benjamin, an expert on ticks and a teacher at Kent Center School, said his presentation appeals to children of all ages. “As long as they don’t mind looking at pictures of gross bugs,� he said with a grin.

When confronted with tick photos, the children were asked what happens if a tick gets on their body.

“Your arm will fall off,� one child told him.

“They will drink all your blood and you will faint,� another said.

And then there was the more standard answer: “Lyme disease.�

Benjamin passed around a small glass case that contained captured ticks, so that the youngsters could get a better look at them. Many of the children and the parents in attendance had, astonishingly, never seen one before.

“Some think that ticks are part of the insect family,� Benjamin said. “But they are really part of the spider family, since they have eight legs.�

Benjamin also explained the two-year life cycle of a tick. He showed pictures of what they look like during the larva, nymph and grown-up stages.

The children were able to add to the presentation in their own way, by recounting stories of when they or their siblings or dogs had an encounter with a tick.

The children were also given ways to avoid ticks, such as wearing long pants while walking through the woods and having their parents carefully check them for ticks when they come in from the outside.

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