Backcountry first aid · CA

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✕ ✕ ✕   Removal protocol   ✕ ✕ ✕

Removing a tick.
Step by step.

Matches, Vaseline, nail polish, twisting — every one of these makes a tick bite more dangerous, not less. The only reliable removal is mechanical, with fine-tipped tweezers, in one steady motion. Below is the full protocol with the reasoning behind each step.

Field reference

The whole protocol on one card.

Print this, fold it, tape it to the inside of your first aid kit. The rest of this page is the detailed version of what’s on the card.

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Backcountry first aid · Field reference

Tick Removal — done right

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Never do these
  • Matches, heat, or flameForces the tick to regurgitate into the bite — exactly how Lyme and co-infections enter
  • Nail polish or VaselineSame result — stresses the tick into emptying its gut
  • Soap on cottonSame mechanism, same risk
  • Twisting or jerkingMouthparts are barbed — steady upward pull only
  • Digging out a broken mouthpartYour body pushes it out like a splinter. Digging causes more damage
How to remove it
  1. 1Use fine-tipped tweezers. Grip at the mouthparts where they enter skin — not the body.
  2. 2Pull straight up with steady pressure. It will resist. Hold firm — releases within seconds.
  3. 3If a mouthpart breaks off, leave it alone. Your body will push it out.
  4. 4Clean the bite with alcohol or soap and water. Wash your hands.
Save the tick — do not flush it

Tape it to an index card with clear packing tape. Write the date and location on your body. Keep for 30 days. If you develop symptoms, that tick goes with you to the doctor. Some labs test it directly — faster and more reliable than waiting for antibodies to show in your blood. A dated tick on a card is one of the most useful things you can hand a doctor.

When to act immediately

If the tick was engorged and you cannot confirm it was off within 24 hours, do not wait for a rash. Many Lyme cases never produce a bullseye. A single preventive dose of doxycycline within 72 hours of a deer tick bite cuts transmission risk significantly.

Ontario residents

No doctor required. A pharmacist can prescribe the preventive doxycycline dose if criteria are met: deer tick, estimated 24+ hours attached, within 72 hours of removal. Walk in with the tick on a card and a clear timeline.

Never do these

The five things that make a tick bite worse.

The methods below all work by stressing the tick. Stressing the tick is the problem — a distressed tick empties the contents of its gut into the bite site. That gut is where Lyme bacteria, Anaplasma, Babesia, and other co-infections live. You don’t want any of it going from the tick’s gut into yours.

Matches, lighters, or any heat

Burning a tick forces it to regurgitate the contents of its gut into the bite. This is the exact transmission pathway for Lyme and its co-infections. Heat is the single worst folk remedy still in circulation.

Nail polish, Vaseline, or other coatings

The theory is that you’ll suffocate the tick. In practice ticks breathe slowly and can hold out for hours; in those hours you’ve only stressed the tick, which empties its gut just like the match does.

Soap on a cotton ball, or essential oils

Same mechanism as nail polish. There is no detergent or scent that gets a tick to back out of skin politely. Mechanical removal with tweezers is the only safe method.

Twisting, jerking, or yanking sideways

A tick’s mouthparts (the hypostome) are covered in backward-facing barbs and a sticky cement. Twisting tears the barbs sideways and increases the chance the mouthparts break off in your skin. Pull straight up, steadily, in a single line.

Digging out a broken mouthpart

If the head or mouthparts stay behind after removal, leave them. Your body treats the fragment exactly like a splinter and pushes it out over the following days. Digging causes a far larger wound than the original bite and introduces real infection risk.

The protocol

How to remove it, step by step.

  1. Use fine-tipped tweezers.

    Pointed precision tweezers — the kind sold for splinters or jewelry work, not the broad flat tweezers in a drugstore cosmetic kit. Dual-ended tick-removal tools like the TickEase or a Tick Twister are excellent alternatives, especially for nymphs, which are the size of a poppy seed and easy to crush with broad tweezers.

  2. Grip at the mouthparts.

    Open the tweezers wide and grip the tick as close to your skin as possible — at the hypostome, not around the body. Gripping the body squeezes its gut contents into the bite, which is the same problem heat and Vaseline create.

  3. Pull straight up with steady pressure.

    The tick will resist. Hold firm. Don’t twist, don’t yank — a slow, steady, perpendicular pull releases the barbs within a few seconds. Counting to ten while you pull is enough for most attachments.

  4. If a mouthpart breaks off, leave it.

    A dark fleck in the bite is almost always just the hypostome. Your skin pushes it out over the next few days. Trying to dig it out with a needle is far more harmful than the fragment itself.

  5. Clean the bite.

    Wash the bite site with soap and warm water, or wipe it with rubbing alcohol. Wash your hands. The bite itself is unlikely to get infected from the skin flora, but a clean site makes it easier to spot a developing rash over the following days.

The advice almost nobody gives

Save the tick. Don't flush it.

Tape the tick to an index card with a strip of clear packing tape. Write two things on the card: the date you removed it and where on the body it was attached. Slide the card into your wallet or stick it on the fridge. Keep it for 30 days.

If symptoms start, that card walks into the doctor’s office or pharmacy with you. A dated, identified tick saves the clinician guessing — they know the species, they know the exposure window, and in some cases the tick itself can be tested directly. Testing the tick is faster and more reliable than waiting weeks for antibodies to show in your blood.

Two Canadian options for tick testing:

  • eTick.ca — a free public-health surveillance program (Bishop’s University) that identifies your tick from a photo within a few days. Submission data also feeds Canada’s tick range maps.
  • Geneticks — a paid service that tests the tick itself for Lyme bacteria and several co-infections by PCR. Turnaround is typically under a week.

Why this matters

A dated tick is a diagnostic shortcut.

Lyme antibody tests in the first few weeks of infection are unreliable — most people are seronegative early, when the antibiotic window is most important. A tick on a card with a date and location bypasses the antibody problem entirely.

The next 30 days

What to watch for after removal.

The single biggest myth about Lyme is the bullseye rash. Most Canadian Lyme cases never produce a bullseye. The textbook erythema migrans is one possible sign of infection — not the gating one. Watch the bite site and yourself broadly.

Local signs

At the bite site

Any expanding rash — bullseye or solid red, oval or irregular, warm or not warm. Treat any rash larger than a loonie that appears in the first 30 days as a Lyme suspect until proven otherwise.

Systemic signs

Anywhere else

Unexplained fever, fatigue, headaches, muscle and joint aches, swollen lymph nodes, or facial weakness on one side (Bell’s palsy). Lyme presents most often as a vague flu-like illness in the weeks after a bite.

If symptoms develop, see a clinician. Bring the tick (if you saved it), the date of the bite, and the bite location. The earlier the antibiotic course starts, the better outcomes are — ideally within 72 hours, but useful well beyond.

Ontario · 2026

The pharmacist can prescribe without a doctor visit.

Since 2023, Ontario pharmacists have been authorized to prescribe a single 200 mg preventive dose of doxycycline for high-risk tick bites without a doctor referral. The criteria are tight:

  • The tick has to be a blacklegged (deer) tick — not a wood tick.
  • It has to have been attached for 24 hours or longer (or attachment time unknown but the tick is engorged).
  • The bite happened in or near a known Lyme risk area.
  • You’re seeing the pharmacist within 72 hours of removal.
  • You’re not pregnant, not breastfeeding, and not allergic to doxycycline.

Walk into any pharmacy in Ontario with the tick on its index card and the timeline. Most pharmacies don’t require an appointment for this assessment; some charge a small consultation fee, others bill OHIP.

Other provinces

Rules vary across Canada.

Quebec, Nova Scotia, and Alberta have varying pharmacist prescribing authorities; most do not currently include preventive doxycycline for tick bites. Check with your provincial pharmacy regulator, or default to a walk-in clinic or family doctor. See the risks page for province-specific paths.

Last reviewed

General information only — not medical advice. In an emergency, call 911. Read the full disclaimer.

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