Chigger bites can pack a wallop of misery

|

Estimated time to read:

2–3 minutes

By Steve Roark | The Winchester Sun

Occasionally you pay a price for being in the woods, espe­cial­ly if you go off trail as I often do. I recent­ly got ham­mered with chig­ger bites, espe­cial­ly around my ankles and feet. They are almost micro­scop­ic yet pack a wal­lop of misery.

Chiggers are a species of mite in the lar­val stage. They are too small to see with the naked eye, and under a micro­scope look sort of like tiny ticks. The adults, which can be seen, feed only on plants and are not a prob­lem for us, except for their lay­ing eggs that make more baby chiggers.

A baby chig­ger wants to become an adult chig­ger, and to do so it needs a high pro­tein meal like a human or oth­er mam­mals, which requires a lot of patience and fast reflex­es to pull off. Chiggers hang around on grass, weeds, or brush for weeks wait­ing for some­thing to walk by. When they sense air move­ment or a whiff of car­bon diox­ide, they get ready and then grab onto what­ev­er brush­es by. They will then poke around look­ing for a good spot to feed, pre­fer­ring warm places where skin and clothes are close togeth­er, such as waist­lines or under socks.

To feed, the lar­val chig­ger gets a good grip by using claws and attach­es its mouth to the skin, then injects a sali­va with an enzyme that breaks down skin cells to a liq­uid form. Your body responds by hard­en­ing skin cells around the sali­va, which forms a tube, which makes it easy for the chig­ger to suck up the liqui­fied skin cells.

Feeding can go on for about four days, then they drop off. Normally when you get into a nest of chig­gers you will receive sev­er­al bites. The most obvi­ous symp­tom is the intense itch­ing that starts when the chig­ger sali­va has bored down to live skin cells. The infect­ed area will even­tu­al­ly form red­dish bumps that remain for a week or more. Thankfully bites don’t cause any seri­ous harm or trans­mit dis­ease, but the itch­ing can be so bad that over-vig­or­ous scratch­ing can become infect­ed. About all you can do is use anti-itch med­ica­tions like calamine lotion or hydrocortisone.

Avoiding chig­ger attacks is not easy since they can be almost any­where. Applying insect repel­lent con­tain­ing DEET is usu­al­ly effec­tive. Chiggers tend to con­gre­gate in tall grass and weedy areas, so you might steer clear of those spots if you can. These over­grown areas often grow a pret­ty white flow­er­ing plant with lacy leaves called Queen Anne’s lace, which most folks around here call “Chigger Weed”.

Chiggers in large numbers can create hundreds of itchy red welts. (Photo by Steve Roark)
Chiggers in large num­bers can cre­ate hun­dreds of itchy red welts. (Photo by Steve Roark)

Please share this story!