Hidden in the Leaves || Part One || Part Two || Part Three

Hidden in the Leaves on DVD

Purchase Hidden in the Leaves on DVD%

What do you see in your backyard? Beyond the green lawn...flowers and shrubs...children playing...Look harder! Still, you don't see them. They're there...in the tens, hundreds, maybe even thousands. But it only takes one. One infected tick can change your life. They're there, hidden in the leaves, waiting to latch on.

Hidden in the Leaves, directed by award-winning filmmaker Mary Healey Jamiel, is the story of University of Rhode Island entomologist Thomas Mather and his team's efforts to help people see the risks for serious tick-transmitted disease lurking in an increasing number of rural, suburban and even semi-urban landscapes in the eastern United States.

This 24 minute long documentary exposes the hidden dangers that ticks represent and spotlights strategies to avoid ticks and their diseases.

Purchase Hidden in the Leaves on DVD

If you would like to view Hidden in the Leaves for free, you can watch it either directly on YouTube or from the links above on TickEncounter. However, if you would like to watch Hidden in the Leaves in it's original form, you can purchase it on DVD by contacting us. It costs $15 plus shipping. Proceeds help support tick-bite prevention programs.

Hidden in the Leaves on YouTube : Part One || Part Two || Part Three

Hidden in the Leaves

Produced, Directed, and Narrated by: Mary Healey Jamiel;
Executive Producer Thomas N. Mather;
Edited by: Jeff Hellyer.

With underwriting support generously provided by:

  • The Apple Pickers Foundation
  • The Bartlett Tree Experts
  • The University of Rhode Island College of the Environment and Life Sciences (CELS)
  • The Honorable Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln Chafee
  • United States Department of Agriculture
  • Westwood/Mansfield (MA) Pediatrics
  • BAYER Health Care, LLC Animal Health Division

Make A Gift Today

Are you concerned about the serious health threat caused by ticks?

Would you like to make appropriate tick-borne diseases prevention programming more widely available? If you answered yes to these questions, please consider supporting the Tick Encounter Resource Center at the University of Rhode Island. Proceeds help support tick-bite prevention programs.