Deb Rebel wrote:Okay... I am type II diabetic and vegan now; I behave because I feel better if I eat like I'm supposed to. The mosquitos laugh at citronella, lavender, and jalapeno pepper juice. They ignore garlic I scarf. If there is one in the whole block she has me for lunch. Only thing that chases them so far is 95% deet, used liberally on clothes and hat, footgear, and bare skin. I am talking close to half an ounce will douse a 'bug outfit' for a week, and adding to the bare areas (ankles, backs of hands, forehead, back of neck) a few times a day. Any more suggestions? Yes I do environmental control but. If there was a non-deet way I'd love it.
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Nick Kitchener wrote:Living in the Canadian North I have become well acquainted with Canada's national bird :-)
Since we get about 6 months of freezing winter, I am yet to find a mosquito eating fish that will survive in this climate. I have been racking my brain recently thinking that the clouds of mosquitoes indicate a low population of it's natural predator in this ecosystem.
So I started thinking about what natural predators live in these parts. There are the migratory birds, but I just knew I was overlooking the main predator. Then it stuck me - Dragon Flies.
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Deb Rebel wrote:We always knew a sort of 'crane fly' that was better than an inch (3cm) in size, as a 'mosquito hawk'. (I grew up just south of Manitoba, I'm an honorary Canuk... :) )
Dragonfly nymphs eat mosquito larvae, I believe. ...
Had a friend that lived in Alaska for a long time, and was near Juneau in summer, in a trailer house... she said she could hear this noise, and it was the mosquitos OUTSIDE.
Vic Johanson
"I must Create a System, or be enslaved by another Man's"--William Blake
Josey Hains wrote:What do Permies think of mosquito dunks? It's some sort of bacteria. I haven't tried it yet but I am tempted. Not sure how (PC) safe that is though...
Amy Stross wrote:Paleo worked for me, too! Less sugar in the blood, I guess. They still swarm, but rarely bite. Meanwhile, my colleagues are covered in bites.
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Deb Rebel wrote:Thank you for that link. That is the best thing I've seen in a long time, and if it will keep the small buffalo flies from chewing me to a booger, sold! They are coming out now (about half the size of a housefly, and they will land on you and want to sit there for about a minute. If chased, they circle and land literally exactly where they just were; and will persist until they get a minute of sit time then bite you and draw blood. They especially love the backs of your knees). When those get going the keeping mosquitos away is only a mere trailing by a long ways issue.
Deb Rebel wrote:If you look they sell more than shirts! My order is going in as soon as I can afford it.
Deb Rebel wrote:Troy Rhodes, thank you. I've unofficially believed this for a good deal of my life, as no matter what I do I seem to be the preferred lunch in the room. My father used to say he always knew when there were mosquitos around, but for his 2-3 bites I was easily into double digits. And they seemed to think mosquito repellant was marinade or flavor basting, until I started getting nearly pure DEET to liberally apply everywhere. No matter what I've eaten, sprayed on, slathered on, or worn; I'm lunch. Thank you for the link, I actually think I'm going to contact them, and offer myself for science.
Lisa Powers wrote:What are some other differences between my swarthy husband and I? He has a rapid resting pulse rate and higher blood pressure than I do. I tend to be a very slow breather, not shallow, just really slow. I notice this about myself compared to most people. I became an even slower breather when I took up wind instruments as a hobby.
I shower much more frequently than does my husband, but my body odor is always TERRIBLE. I recently googled "body odor that smells like copper". Maybe TMI, but my pits will smell like they were filled with old pennies all night long unless I spritz some magnesium oil or dust with baking soda, both very effective neutralizers. My husband just gets cheesy feet and he never goes without socks. I am barefoot all mosquito season long.
He is going to try a daily dose of nutritional/brewers yeast to see if that helps him. He's also a tick magnet, and guess what, I am not.
Joy Oasis wrote:
Lisa Powers wrote:What are some other differences between my swarthy husband and I? He has a rapid resting pulse rate and higher blood pressure than I do. I tend to be a very slow breather, not shallow, just really slow. I notice this about myself compared to most people. I became an even slower breather when I took up wind instruments as a hobby.
I shower much more frequently than does my husband, but my body odor is always TERRIBLE. I recently googled "body odor that smells like copper". Maybe TMI, but my pits will smell like they were filled with old pennies all night long unless I spritz some magnesium oil or dust with baking soda, both very effective neutralizers. My husband just gets cheesy feet and he never goes without socks. I am barefoot all mosquito season long.
He is going to try a daily dose of nutritional/brewers yeast to see if that helps him. He's also a tick magnet, and guess what, I am not.
Hmm, do you think copper smell might e not something they like? Does that mean you have lots of copper in your sweat? Because B vitamins seem to work because of the smell as do all the repellants.
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