A brutal winter may mean fewer active ticks during the winter months, but I'm not sure if it necessarily leads to fewer ticks once the weather warms. I saw something recently from Northern Woodlands that suggested insects can actually fare better in colder winters than warmer ones. The idea is that at low temperatures, insects have a slower metabolism, so their fat reserves stick around longer. In warmer winters, they burn through those reserves more quickly. Granted ticks aren't insects, but I wonder if the same concept applies to them. I know even after 2014-2015's brutal winter, the tick numbers were crazy here in the Catskills. Here's hoping this milder 2015-2016 winter will knock them back! Then again, it seems like just about nothing kills ticks, so maybe it's just wishful thinking no matter what the weather does.