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I have a few techniques.



ijou

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kurohinge1 wrote:
I heard that mosquitoes home in on the carbon dioxide in your breath, so you could also try not breathing ... until they go away.
GridReaper wrote:Also, supposedly, mosquitos aren't a big fan of cinnamon. So, chew cinnamon Mentos or even lather yourself in cinnamon oil, if you feel bold and lickable.
yellowlightman wrote:A friend of mine just got back from basic camp and told me he kept the bugs off my eating a match stick or two per day...
65.146.70.251 wrote:While serving as a Marine Corps infantryman on a training operation in the jungles of Panama, a senior Marine told me that eating match heads (which were included in our rations) would keep mosquitos at bay. I thought he was joking, but tried it out of desparation. I discovered that by eating about two match heads per few hours mosquitoes and other biting insects didn't bother me. I also discovered that you have to begin eating them four or five hours in advance of going into mosquito country.
At the time I was told this, he said that the reason for the effect was from sweating ouit the sulfur in the matches. Mosquitoes don't like sulfur. They smell it on you and stay away.
After returning to Alabama, I have heard old people speak of taking sulfur tablets to keep mosquitoes away.
I have more faith in this than in OFF or any comercial product.
Japanese scientists have developed a vaccine for the mosquito-borne West Nile virus and will start testing on humans in the coming months, a researcher said Friday.
Molokidan wrote:I have no choice but to pull out the Hairspray/Lighter combo. It really gets the job done.
Onishi's 22-year-old son, Tatsuro, had sprayed the area immediately outside the home with pesticide to try and kill a pesky mosquito that had been annoying him while he was taking a nap inside his car.
Shortly afterward, Tatsuro Onishi lit a cigarette. The sparks from his lighter caused an explosion when they came into contact with the pesticide still floating in the air around him and the blaze quickly raced through the family home.
Mulboyne wrote:Molokidan wrote:I have no choice but to pull out the Hairspray/Lighter combo. It really gets the job done.
Mind you don't try pesticides first
Smoker tackling pesky mosquito sparks blaze that guts home
MDN wrote:... but the mosquito that had been annoying him was killed.
Deborah Cameron in Tokyo wrote:It's true, mosquitoes really do have preferences ...
If you are a sporty type, have Type O blood and are not as skinny as you used to be ... For you, mosquitoes will go that extra mile.
Ten years of research into mosquito habits and more than two years of persuading volunteers to be swarmed has been enough for a Tokyo-based expert to draw conclusions.
Dr Yoshikazu Shirai, who has a PhD in medical entomology, based his findings on the tests he did on 64 people who held their arm in a humid enclosure for 10 minutes. By repeating the experiment twice on different days, each person was eventually exposed to 105 mosquitoes, he said.
... Men are slightly more likely to be bitten than women but it is blood type (regrettably Type O is common) and body heat that really get them interested. Leaner types are more likely to be spared.
... To avoid the ethical dilemma of potentially exposing people to mosquito-borne illnesses, Dr Shirai devised a remarkable solution. He de-beaked his mozzies.
... Dr Shirai is on a quest for a bait to catch and kill mosquitoes by drawing them away from people. "No one has found a lure that can attract mosquitoes better than the human body," he said.
silverfall wrote:... Back home they come out at dusk and carry off small children and animals.
Taro Toporific wrote:I hear Steve B keeps next to his futon a dai-katana with an edge honed sharp enough to trim a mosquito's eyebrows in the dark. :P
kurohinge1 wrote:Moral: Remember to invite a few sporty, overweight, O-type males to your next BBQ ... as mosquito fodder.
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