There are a number of non-warming related factors that can exacerbate the problem, but bottom line is that population explosions of any sort thrive when there is an environment that lends itself to such. There is a reason why no humans permanently live in Northern Siberia.
My thoughts on the tick explosion: Over the last 50 years, New Hampshire has had TREMENDOUS reforestation. In the late 1800s, only 25% of NH was Forest - now its almost 80%. Due to reforestation, there have been numerous species reintroduced, or that went from barely-getting-by to thriving - the Whitetail Deer is one example of one animal that has massively rebounded in the area, and one animal that also carries ticks.
Also in recent years, you've had two socio-political impacts on the forest. First, there has been a migration away from farming, and many farms that remain have shifted to sustained/local/organic crops... ESPECIALLY in the PacNW and New England areas where these tick problems are increasing. The biggest impact of this shift in farming has been the reduction of insecticides in the area, which naturally, increases the insect population. The second factor could be traffic through the woods. With an explosion in the amount of people hiking and spending time in the backcountry, as well as having more animals due to reforestation... a tick has many more opportunities to score a ride.
So I totally see where Rocket21 is coming from. Sure, global warming might be an ultimate cause of some of this, but there are a number of contributing factors that can be analyzed, and that research might lead to some sort of homeostasis with the moose community and the rest of the population. Ofcourse, the easy solution would be to have long brutal winters that kill the ticks - I'm personally all for that!