queerbychoice (
queerbychoice) wrote2009-08-28 11:33 pm
Mosquitoes
They're eating us alive. Every day, we get bitten five or ten or fifteen times each. Inside. I've taken to trying to keep as much of my skin as possible covered at all times, throwing a blanket over my bare legs when it's 105 degrees or hotter outside, but the moment I stand up to do anything at all, my shins get bitten. At night we have to tuck the sheet around every square inch of ourselves and make sure never to turn over in our sleep and dislodge the sheet, or else we're rudely awakened to a mosquito bite on the spine, in the most impossible-to-reach spot possible. Twice a month I buy out the entire supply of generic-equivalent Benadryl cream at the local grocery store, trying to keep the itching under control. In the evenings, we have pretend conversations out loud with imaginary strangers who ask us questions: "So what do you two do for fun at home?" "We slather Benadryl cream on each other." "No, I mean, what do you do for a romantic gesture?" "We squash mosquitoes for each other and thank each other for the valiant protection." We usually kill five or six mosquitoes in the house each day, but there are always more left in the house when we go to bed.
I guess it started in June. It got gradually worse through July, and became completely unbearable by the beginning of August. It was just as bad last year at this time, but then I was only visiting on weekends. I didn't think I could possibly survive living here under these conditions, so I bought Susan a pet door insert for the sliding glass door. She used to leave the door open most of the time so the dogs could go in and out, so I figured that's how the mosquitoes were getting in. But they still get in just as much now. The flap on the pet door isn't airtight; there are tiny gaps on each side of it, and I guess the mosquitoes are very good at finding those gaps. Susan says there are huge clouds of mosquitoes all over town, including at her school, and her students complain of horrible mosquito problems at their homes, too.
One of them just landed on my computer screen, and I failed in my effort to squash it.
This situation is truly intolerable, so I'm begging for advice. What can I do that I haven't already done? The Benadryl cream helps, but it takes about five minutes, and the stupid things keep biting so often that even five minutes of agony per bite is enough to completely ruin a major portion of every evening. I tried spraying Raid flying insect killer all over the house, but even when I sprayed an individual mosquito directly from within six inches, a prolonged burst of as much as five seconds, the thing flew away and didn't even look sick. It may well have died later - we did notice a decrease in mosquitoes the day after an intense spraying of Raid - but two days after the spraying, the mosquito population was back to normal. Meanwhile, I had a Raid-induced sore throat for a full week after the spraying.
They're driving both of us insane. I've never experienced a mosquito problem indoors before. Maybe that's because I never had indoor dogs before and therefore never needed a pet door. But Susan has had indoor dogs for about fifteen years, and apparently she's never had this bad a mosquito problem indoors anywhere but this one mosquito-cursed town where we're currently condemned to live.
I guess it started in June. It got gradually worse through July, and became completely unbearable by the beginning of August. It was just as bad last year at this time, but then I was only visiting on weekends. I didn't think I could possibly survive living here under these conditions, so I bought Susan a pet door insert for the sliding glass door. She used to leave the door open most of the time so the dogs could go in and out, so I figured that's how the mosquitoes were getting in. But they still get in just as much now. The flap on the pet door isn't airtight; there are tiny gaps on each side of it, and I guess the mosquitoes are very good at finding those gaps. Susan says there are huge clouds of mosquitoes all over town, including at her school, and her students complain of horrible mosquito problems at their homes, too.
One of them just landed on my computer screen, and I failed in my effort to squash it.
This situation is truly intolerable, so I'm begging for advice. What can I do that I haven't already done? The Benadryl cream helps, but it takes about five minutes, and the stupid things keep biting so often that even five minutes of agony per bite is enough to completely ruin a major portion of every evening. I tried spraying Raid flying insect killer all over the house, but even when I sprayed an individual mosquito directly from within six inches, a prolonged burst of as much as five seconds, the thing flew away and didn't even look sick. It may well have died later - we did notice a decrease in mosquitoes the day after an intense spraying of Raid - but two days after the spraying, the mosquito population was back to normal. Meanwhile, I had a Raid-induced sore throat for a full week after the spraying.
They're driving both of us insane. I've never experienced a mosquito problem indoors before. Maybe that's because I never had indoor dogs before and therefore never needed a pet door. But Susan has had indoor dogs for about fifteen years, and apparently she's never had this bad a mosquito problem indoors anywhere but this one mosquito-cursed town where we're currently condemned to live.

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Why not put up a batbox in your yard? That way, it will attract local bats who LOVE eating mosquitoes! (Won't help with the larvae though, fish eat that).
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We've mostly avoided the mosquito problem (except when I head to the other side of the building to look at the space shuttle) by planting some small American beautyberry plants near the door - they naturally repel mosquitoes, but I don't know if these will grow in California or not.
Also, citronella candles actually do help a little and you can start to tolerate the smell.
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*make sure there isn't any standing water anywhere on your property; if you have a rain barrel, put a tight-fitting screen over top of it or dilute some dish detergent or cooking oil into it. clean your eaves if you haven't recently; landscape to drain water from your property. if you have any standing water in your yard (esp. standing water that gets sunlight and has foliage near it), do whatever you can to get rid of it.
*don't wear any sort of perfume, essential oils, or use scented lotions or creams, shampoos, etc.
*avoid being outside on either side of dusk and dawn, as that's when mosquitoes are most active.
*import dragonflies if you can in your area.
*wear loose-fitting, long-sleeved, light-coloured clothing
that's all i can think of. getting rid of any nearby water should be of primary concern.
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Get a mosquito net for your bed. I've seen some new product that you wear on you and it's supposed to repel mosquitos. http://www.offprotects.com/clip-on-mosquito-repellent/
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West Nile virus just arrived here a few years ago, so at least as of last summer, the government was still spraying heavily for mosquitoes. I don't know whether they're still doing it this summer, but it didn't seem to help any last summer. The mosquitoes were horrible then too!
I guess I'll try the garlic mosquito barrier. I've had terrible luck with standard mosquito repellents, though - on camping trips I've experimented with spraying repellent on only one arm and leg and so on, and it actually seems like I get bitten more in the areas with repellent.
We do have a lot of dragonflies flying around outside already.
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As I said to
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Neither of us generally wears scented stuff. We have lots of little blue dragonflies in the yard. I guess I need to start wearing a thawb. Do you know why light-colored clothing would be better than dark-colored clothing?
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Also, I just looked up the thing your mother had that was supposed to repel mosquitoes with sound. According to this page, those never work well either, because the ultrasonic noises that people can't hear are inherently too weak for insects to hear them at all from a distance of as little as 30 feet.
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I do know that they sell stakes that give off light and sound combinations to repel mosquitoes. Good luck!!
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Depending on your attitude towards killing, an outdoor fogger or hose spray might be useful. Since indoor sprays have already made you feel lousy, I'd avoid those.
Epsom salts are said to make people less attractive to mosquitos (I assume by bathing in them - don't know, since salts irritate my skin).