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When The Woods Bite Back: How Lab-Bred Tick Diseases Could Infect Folks Living Off-Grid First

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Where Back Woods Living Meets Government Ticks

Picture this: You’re deep in the woods, miles from the nearest paved road, the kind of place where the only signals you pick up come from wind through the pines and the chatter of birds settling in for the night. You set down your pack after a long day of foraging, hunting, or checking your livestock in a far-flung pasture. Then it happens—you feel something on your ankle. A tick, small as a fleck of dirt, already drilling in.

For most off-grid folks, ticks are old enemies—annoying, stubborn, but familiar. Yet lately, a darker question shadows every bite. What if the tick on your skin didn’t come from the woods at all? What if its ancestors came from a U.S. laboratory breeding exotic species tied to deadly diseases?

Because that’s not fiction anymore. Recent investigations show multiple U.S. labs importing live African ticks—the kind that spread Crimean-Congo Hemorrhagic Fever, or CCHF—and raising them in colonies here in America. This emerging threat cuts especially close to those who live, work, and hunt outside city limits, far from hospitals and far from fast medical support. Out in the tall grass and brush, you don’t get second chances.

A Deadly Disease from Overseas… Brought In on Purpose


In the shadow of America’s cattle country, tiny lab-grown ticks wait behind glass for one bad mistake.

First, let’s talk about CCHF. Researchers first encountered it during World War II on the Crimean Peninsula, and the virus has been a terror ever since. Imagine a fever that spikes like a blowtorch, headaches that feel like your skull is splitting, and internal bleeding that can turn organs into mush. CCHF kills anywhere from 10 to 40 percent of its victims, usually in the second week—right when people think they’re turning the corner.

And the tick that spreads it, the Hyalomma, isn’t your average slow-moving hitchhiker. These things are fast. They hunt. They chase. They sprint across bare skin like they’ve got somewhere to be.

In places like Africa, Asia, southern Russia, and the Balkans, CCHF is a known killer. But here’s the jaw-dropper: we don’t have CCHF in the United States. Or rather, we didn’t… until laboratories started importing the disease-carrying ticks for research.

For off-grid families brushing past high grasses, or farmers checking goats and sheep at dawn, that changes the whole game. It’s one thing to dodge the diseases already here. It’s another to worry that the next tick might come with a virus never meant for North America—delivered unintentionally through a lab accident.

From Plum Island to the Prairie: Why Kansas? Why Now?

Next, let’s look at how this threat traveled from distant shores to America’s heartland.

The White Coat Waste Project, a government-spending watchdog, uncovered 10 USDA contracts tied to mRNA vaccine development—one specifically targeting CCHF. These contracts fuel research at the Agricultural Research Service in Manhattan, Kansas, working alongside the National Bio and Agro-Defense Facility (NBAF), the nation’s new high-security animal disease lab.

NBAF used to be based on Plum Island off New York—a remote place purposely isolated because of the kind of pathogens being studied. But now? It sits right next to cattle country.

Livestock operations stretch in every direction. Off-grid ranchers raise goats, sheep, cattle, and pigs not far from these facilities. Add in partnerships with UC Davis in California and Texas Tech in Lubbock—two other livestock hubs—and suddenly the map of CCHF tick research starts looking eerily close to where animals, and the people caring for them, live and work in daily contact with the land.

If you’re someone who handles animals in isolated areas, you don’t need imagination to see how one lab mistake could ripple out into your world. The line between “contained experiment” and “new American outbreak” gets thin fast.

Breeding Exotic Ticks in America’s Heartland

Now, here’s where the story tightens.

These labs aren’t just testing existing bugs. They’re breeding colonies of African Hyalomma ticks—fast, aggressive, highly infectious ticks—in the very center of our livestock industry.

Inside sealed rooms, technicians raise imported ticks, infect animals, and study how the virus spreads. Outside those rooms, Kansas farmland stretches to the horizon, dotted with cattle, bison, deer, coyotes, and every wild creature that ticks love to feed on.

The USDA says this research prepares us for possible outbreaks. Critics argue it may cause them.

And history gives those critics plenty of ammunition.

History Repeats Itself—Especially with Ticks

Kris Newby, the Stanford science writer who penned Bitten: The Secret History of Lyme Disease and Biological Weapons, has spent years interviewing retired lab workers and tracking down classified documents. Her conclusion: America has a long history of sloppy tick research spilling into the wild.

She points to Willy Burgdorfer, the scientist who discovered the Lyme pathogen. According to Newby, Burgdorfer oversaw tick projects so risky that new technicians were bitten on their first day by fast-moving African tick species. One of those techs fell gravely ill.

Other tick shipments sent to Canada reportedly carried unexpected pathogens that forced entire colonies to be destroyed before they spread into local wildlife.

Then there’s the almost unbelievable story of Dr. Daniel Sonenshine releasing 152,000 radioactive lone star ticks on the East Coast in the 1960s. Shortly afterward, cases of Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever appeared in places it had never been recorded—Montauk, Long Island—then spread across the country.

For off-gridders, these stories hit hard. You know exactly how often you pull ticks off your neck, your legs, your clothes, your livestock. If something exotic ever leaks out, you’re the first in line to meet it.

Modern Research, Old Problems: The mRNA Angle

Let’s shift gears to the technology behind all this: mRNA vaccines.

The USDA has poured money into developing mRNA vaccines for CCHF and other foreign animal diseases. Meanwhile, EcoHealth Alliance—the same group tied to the Wuhan gain-of-function fiasco—received a $3.7 million Defense Department grant to study CCHF under the category of “weapons of mass destruction.”

That phrase alone should grab your attention.

Some mRNA shots for swine are already licensed overseas. Here in the U.S., none exist yet for cattle or other livestock, but ranchers feel the pressure building.

Dr. Brooke Miller, a Virginia cattleman interviewed on The HighWire, said he skipped vaccinating his herd one year and saw pregnancy rates close to 100 percent—compared to the usual 4–5 percent abortions after vaccination. Pig farmers who use Merck’s Sequivity mRNA shots have to sign nondisclosure agreements.

In the off-grid world, where people raise their own eggs, meat, and milk, the thought of forced livestock shots—especially experimental ones—hits like a gut punch.

African Swine Fever, MIT, and More Imported Threats

The USDA also funded an MIT project developing mRNA vaccines for African Swine Fever, a virus that kills nearly 100 percent of infected pigs. It has never reached the U.S., but labs are now importing the virus—and young piglets—to test mRNA treatments.

Piglets as young as four weeks are injected twice, euthanized, and dissected for data.

To critics like White Coat Waste’s Justin Goodman, this is yet another case of government labs bringing in foreign diseases, raising foreign vectors, and trusting human error won’t open the door to catastrophe.

If the past is any guide, that’s a foolish bet.

Why Off-Grid Folks Can’t Ignore This

Here’s the brutal truth:
People who spend the most time outdoors—hunters, foragers, homesteaders, botanists, field workers, ranchers—are the ones who will meet exotic pathogens first if something leaks. Not city dwellers. Yep, You.

Ticks don’t care about boundaries. They hitch rides on deer, rabbits, birds, coyotes, livestock. They expand their range every season. And once a new species or virus takes root, good luck stopping it.

That’s why this issue matters far beyond politics or lab protocols. It’s about protecting the people who live closest to the land.

Staying Safe When the Labs Won’t

Until the research landscape changes, off-grid families should double down on the basics:

  • Treat boots, pants, and packs with permethrin.
  • Do head-to-toe tick checks every time you come in from brush.
  • Keep dogs and livestock treated and inspected.
  • Carry a proper tick removal tool.
  • Stay loud, stay informed, and push back on risky government research that brings foreign pathogens onto American soil.

Because once a new disease slips beyond the lab, no fence, no distance, no off-grid hideaway can keep it from your back forty.


Source: https://www.offthegridnews.com/extreme-survival/when-the-woods-bite-back-how-lab-bred-tick-diseases-could-infect-folks-living-off-grid-first/


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Before It’s News® is a community of individuals who report on what’s going on around them, from all around the world. Anyone can join. Anyone can contribute. Anyone can become informed about their world. "United We Stand" Click Here To Create Your Personal Citizen Journalist Account Today, Be Sure To Invite Your Friends.


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