CCrew wrote:Fred Trout wrote:Cute ? I suppose - they also carry bubonic plague which is endemic in western US so worse things than your car-damage can happen.
1-17 cases in the US per year. More likely to get hit by lightning. The plague thing is a bit tinfoil hat don't ya think?

Depends on where you live. A friend in northern New Mexico (near Santa Fe) was the first person in New Mexico that particular year to be diagnosed with bubonic plague. The likeliest point of exposure was a prairie dog colony he'd walked past on a hike and he did say he'd seen a dead prairie dog there. He was diagnosed on day three of becoming symptomatic. Plague is bacterial, so antibiotics knocked it out and he fully recovered. After the whole episode, he had a T shirt made with an emblem that said: New Mexico, Land of the Flea, Home of the Plague.
Hantavirus, on the other hand, is fairly terrifying. It is viral, is easily misdiagnosed, has no treatment other than palliative care, and has a high death rate. I lived in southwestern CO when hantavirus was first diagnosed on the Navajo reservation (1993) and was working on an excavation in northern New Mexico. We spent a lot of time spraying bleach on our excavation units that summer. Tourism to Cortez, CO (Mesa Verde National Park) and Durango, CO (hey, it's Durango!) dropped off drastically that summer, but that is all in the rear view mirror. Now it pops up infrequently, but it has been diagnosed on the coast of Texas, in Florida, and at some national park in Calif.