Within the West African country of Sierra Leone there is a gap in the knowledge base of tick distribution and ecology. With a limited number of studies conducted on ticks over the past decades and no consistent surveillance programs in place, the abundance and diversity of these vectors remains unknown in the Eastern and Western Provinces where this study took place. Risk for tickborne diseases has been well established within the country, as well as its neighboring nations of Guinea and Liberia. The following study was composed of a tick survey across the Moambe, Bo, and Kenema Districts specifically looking at land usage types related to agriculture. The first of two hypotheses of this experiment was there would be a greater diversity and abundance of tick species found in land use primarily associated with livestock. The second hypothesis was there would be a significant correlation between agricultural land use types and their associated environmental factors (temperature, humidity, cloud cover, level of land cultivation, prominent plant type, leaf litter, tree cover, sun exposure, animals observed) and tick abundance. Within the three Districts, eleven transects were chosen based on the primary crop associated with the site and were sampled by flagging. Environmental data were gathered along these transects and included in the data analysis. Overall, 7,220 meters of land were sampled, and 18 ticks were found. There were 17 larval ticks of the genera Hemoptysis’s and Amblyomma, and 1 adult female Hyalomma rufipes. The results of the data analysis indicated correlations between the land use types, environmental factors, and both the prevalence and abundance of ticks.