The best way I know to keep unwanted bugs like mosquitoes away without zappers and chemicals is planting lavender. They hate it and will avoid it, while also helping local Bee populations because bees love it. It also keeps wasps and hornets away, as they hate it too.
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Well that's a plan! Haven't had much luck planting out there though. Typical NW Florida soil, about 2-3" of topsoil, sand all the way to China.
You got me thinking on citronella though! Forgot about that.
Lemon Grass also. It should grow well there.
I grow a bunch and don't really notice it keeping mosquitos away from the area. But I'll pick some, crush it up in my hands, and rub it on myself and the cats. Works as good as most bug sprays without feeling like I need a shower after.
That sounds like a pain for growing conditions.
I use planters because I live in an apartment, but my mother in law uses those little kids pools full of soil to get around not having good soil to grow in. The pools seem to work really well, and she even customized how each soil can drain for different crops and flowers by cutting drain holes. I think she is also trying to grow rice in one of them that is more flooded. haha
I was curious and looked it up, English Lavender doesn't really like to grow in Florida either because of the heat and humidity. But Spanish, French, Goodwin Creek grey and Phenominal lavender all grow well there. Which is now a fact I know. haha
Citronella is a pretty good alternative! I used to use the candles specifically for mosquitoes. The only problem I had with it is it also keeps other things away I don't want to avoid like bees and such.
When I lived in Florida I had a Mosquito Magnet
These things are amazing, they output CO2 and have a net on them that traps the mosquitos.
I couldn't find a pic with the net full but when i emptied mine every day or 2 it looks like a mesh crow royal sized bag, and it's FILLED with the fuckers every time.
Can't afford one ATM. :( When I get working I'm all over this.
Are they all dead in there? Or do you release them in the woods?
“Mosquito Dunks” in a bucket of water. The water attracts females to lay eggs in the bucket. The “dunks” have a bacteria in them that kills the larva after the eggs hatch preventing further generations from maturing.
I put about a quarter of a disk in each bucket and set them up around the yard in problem areas. Need to add more dunk about once a month.
There is a “Mosquito Bits” which is a granulated version of the same thing that might work if you still have ponds but I’m not familiar with the exact dosage
Bought a 20 pack thanks to you!
Good luck! Hope it works out 🤞
This is a cool solution, I'd never heard of this.
It reminds me of how they deal with mosquitos on an industrial scale, releasing millions of infertile males into the wild to prevent a next generation.
Works great for me in Georgia
There are big expensive mosquito magnets that take a propane tank and electricity to run (these are environmentally ok) and the Thermacell device (somewhat dubious but very effective). Source: Finland, the land of mosquitos
Can confirm the gas powered ones work really well, but you gotta run it early in the season to catch the fuckers right after hatching.
A friend lives in moscito hell and could probably make burgers daily with the amount he catches.
Source: Norway. Also a mosquite hellhole, like Finland
I've had those thermacell things and it was just filled with bugs EXCEPT mosquitos lol
I can't edit my posts for some reason, but I wasn't being sarcastic about global warming. A monster bolus of hot air smacking the polar vortex on it's ass is what send Canada weather down here. Fucking global warming.
Have you tried "mosquito dunks" in your remaining ponds?
Make a fly trap, but put mosquito poison in the water since they will use the water to lay their eggs and just make more mosquitos otherwise.
A fly trap is just a bottle of water, maybe with something to attract the flies, and soap with a funnel made of paper in the top of the bottle.
You can make a mosquito trap that lures them to lay eggs in poisoned water and deals with the issue earlier in the year
This is what we do too, minus the poisoned water. It's just a one-way trap made with some cloth net and plastic bottles.
It takes a while to make a difference but eventually the population of mosquitoes should decrease (unless they are reproducing elsewhere)
This is a native plant guy and he talks about a trap specifically designed for mosquitos, not other insects. Said its something about a sweat molecule that attracts them. I guess it's also useful if you want to feed your carnivorous plants.
A farm channel I watch on YT solved his horsefly issue by wrapping the outside of a plastic garbage can with a roll of wide bug tape. Really made a difference and when it fills up you just tear it off and feed them to your chickens
mosquito buckets help a lot but you won't see results right away.
Best idea I've seen yet!
https://www.amazon.com/Mosquito-Magnet-MM4200B-Patriot-Plus/dp/B07CLT5D6Z
Cant vouch for this model specifically, but my dad's had good luck with a similar one. Targets biting insects specifically exactly how you said: CO2, heat, moisture.
Crud, too rich for my blood ATM. Looks much like what I was imagining for an effective trap.
For what it's worth, they totally work.
I have a friend with a cabin by a lake in the woods, it's lovely, but the mosquito situation there is no joke. She has a few of these and when she goes to empty them periodically, it's just a trap full of mosquitos... It's not other critters, it's just like a pint of dead mosquitos.
I heard humming birds eat them. You could try to set up some humming bird feeders and see if that helps.
Seen a hummer or two, but not for the last couple of years. Guess they're dying off with everything else, and in any case there's not much flowering out there. Still have some at home!
Put feeders out the last few years, but they don't see any action.
Plant flowers they like instead. My hummingbird feeder went unnoticed but now i have lots with flowers like hollyhocks
The nearest body of water is about a mile away from me, I attract dragonflies with tall stem grasses and way too many flies.
Maybe you can encourage them with some tall grass? I don't remember what kind I scattered, whatever the University of Colorado said to plant here in Denver years ago
Got a few "ponds" at the house, between 10g and 150g. Brings all the boys to the yard! But the dried up ponds at camp set me back a year or three. Since they take 2 years to mature, they won't be back this year or probably the next.
Yes but they also need 2ft high plants to hunt from. If you cut all your tall grass they will have to hunt elsewhere
https://www.amazon.com/Spartan-Mosquito-Pro-Tech-Acre/dp/B09B1BP1JH
Not sure how well it works, buy my sister in law has them around her house.
Populate the ponds with frogs/tadpoles to start killing the mosquito larvae.
Propane mosquito traps are about the only thing you can use that will make a dent otherwise.
You should see the tadpoles in my house ponds! I'm the only reason we have frogs on my street.
They do make CO2 mosquito attractor traps. I don't have any experience with them, but i can tell you that they do exist.
https://pestgnome.com/blog/mosquito-control/co2-mosquito-traps/
The problems with CO2 traps aside from them emitting yet more CO2 (every bit counts) is that it's something you have to constantly resupply, most of the CO2 is wasted because of how it works, wind can affect its performance, and it uses energy, so isn't all that passive. Attacking the larvae stage in various ways is a better method. And of course reducing or eliminating any standing water where they can breed, although there are species that use damp soil.
Just get fake ones
Mosquitos aren't exactly smart, you can buy ones to hang off your porch or even off your hat.
Insect populations dropped by 41% globally since 2015.
No mosquitos will be the least of our problems when every species above in the food chain ends up on the endangered list.