Ticks
PeakHighest risk window of the year.
Do this: Wear permethrin-treated clothing in fields and woods, and do a full tick check within two hours of coming inside.
Practical local guides for bites, poison ivy, Bay stings, pool rash, heat rash, winter itch, and seasonal skin irritation.
Editorial only. Not medical advice.
Start with your situation
Skip the search bar. Pick what just happened - we’ll point you to the right hub.
Seasonal warnings, quick relief tips, and product picks - one short email when the Peninsula's itch picture shifts.
Featured content hubs
Mosquitoes, greenheads, ticks, chiggers, no-see-ums, wasps and bees.
ExploreIdentification, decontamination, and calm relief - including sumac and stinging nettle.
ExploreSea lice, jellyfish stings, swimmer’s itch, and pool/hot-tub rash.
ExploreBedbugs, fleas, dust mites, laundry irritation, and what your pet brings inside.
ExploreHeat rash, sun-related rashes, and the Shore’s underrated winter dry-skin itch.
ExplorePollen-driven itch, hives that come and go, and seasonal eczema flares.
ExploreDelmarva Seasonal Itch Meter
A plain-language read on the Peninsula's June itch picture - yard edges, marshes, Bay water, and indoor air. Status uses words and symbols, not color alone.
Highest risk window of the year.
Do this: Wear permethrin-treated clothing in fields and woods, and do a full tick check within two hours of coming inside.
Common and biting/blooming across the Peninsula.
Do this: Dump standing water around the yard weekly, and use an EPA-registered repellent at dusk near marsh and pond edges.
Highest risk window of the year.
Do this: Learn the leaf shape, never burn yard debris in spring or summer, and wash exposed skin with a urushiol-cutting cleanser within two hours.
Common and biting/blooming across the Peninsula.
Do this: Check the local Bay nettle forecast before swimming, and pack a simple sting kit with vinegar and a card scraper.
Common and biting/blooming across the Peninsula.
Do this: Start a daily non-drowsy antihistamine 1–2 weeks before your usual flare, run AC on recirculate, and shower at night to keep oak pollen off your pillow.
Background risk only.
Do this: Shower and change clothes after time outdoors, run AC instead of opening windows on high pollen days, and start a daily antihistamine before symptoms peak.
Highest risk window of the year.
Do this: Keep indoor humidity at 40–50%, run bathroom fans during and after showers, and add a HEPA purifier in the room with the worst symptoms.
Background risk only.
Do this: Switch to fragrance-free cleansers, moisturize within three minutes of bathing, and run a humidifier in the bedroom on cold nights.
Common and biting/blooming across the Peninsula.
Do this: Stay on cut paths in tall grass, treat boots and pants with permethrin, and shower within two hours of coming inside.
Highest risk window of the year.
Do this: Wear light-colored, long-sleeve clothing on marsh edges and Atlantic beaches in late June and July, and skip dawn/dusk walks when wind is off the marsh.
Common and biting/blooming across the Peninsula.
Do this: Avoid dawn and dusk near marsh, dune, and water edges; finer-mesh screens and a picaridin repellent work better than standard mesh and DEET alone.
Activity is climbing - start prevention now.
Do this: Rinse and towel off immediately after swimming in warm, shallow Bay coves or ponds, and avoid wading where waterfowl gather.
Activity is climbing - start prevention now.
Do this: Late-summer ankle bites on Atlantic-side beaches usually mean stable flies - use a picaridin repellent on the lower legs and check wind direction before settling in.
Common and biting/blooming across the Peninsula.
Do this: Watch for ground nests in yard edges and woodpiles late summer, keep food and sweet drinks covered outdoors, and step away calmly if one lands on you.
Activity is climbing - start prevention now.
Do this: Inspect hotel headboards and luggage racks on travel, keep bags off beds, and run worn travel clothes through a hot dryer cycle when you get home.
Common and biting/blooming across the Peninsula.
Do this: Keep pets on a year-round flea preventive, vacuum rugs and pet sleeping areas weekly, and wash pet bedding hot during peak months.
Background risk only.
Do this: Back-to-school season is the peak window - check kids' scalps weekly, discourage shared hats and brushes, and act fast on the first nit you find.
Highest risk window of the year.
Do this: Wear shower shoes at public pools, campgrounds, and locker rooms; dry between toes after swimming; rotate sneakers so each pair fully dries; and keep an antifungal powder in your beach bag for damp water shoes.
Newsletter
Recent issues - what's flaring up across the Peninsula and what to do about it.
June 2026
Salinity is up, water temps are up, and the nettles are showing in middle Chesapeake. A simple sting kit and a calm post-swim routine.
Read issueMay 2026
Greenhead fly season on the marsh edge - what works, what doesn't, and which beach days to skip if you're sensitive to bites.
Read issueApril 2026
Why your skin can itch even without a rash this month, plus an honest take on antihistamines, oat baths, and when to call a clinician.
Read issuePrevention gear
The few items worth keeping by the back door, in the beach bag, or under the sink. Honest picks for Shore conditions.
Featured · Summer field guide
The seven items we'd actually pack for backyard bites, poison ivy cleanup, beach stings, and trail walks - plus where to keep copies.
What we’d pack in a small dry bag for sea nettles, sea lice, and the rest of a Shore beach day.
See picksPicks tuned for Eastern Shore conditions: salt-marsh mosquitoes, no-see-ums, greenheads, ticks, and chiggers.
See picksPre-load the garage with the items that turn a brushy weekend from a week-long rash into a shower and done.
See picksThe boring, effective set we’d use to keep skin from cracking in a windy Shore winter.
See picksSeasonal itch warnings, practical prevention tips, and calm relief guidance for bites, poison ivy, beach itch, stings, heat rash, dry skin, and allergy-related itch across Delmarva.
Trust & safety
We read the literature so you don’t have to.
Written for the Eastern Shore, not the entire internet.
If we earn from a link, you’ll know on the page.
Plain-language signals for when to call a clinician.
Stopping the next itch beats treating this one.