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Mosquito Repellent PlantsNicolas Feedback About This Post:RE: Mosquito Repellent PlantsI found a mosquito repellent but its not a plant its a spray.Here it is use a 20 gallon hose-end sprayer to spray the area with a mixture of 1 cup each of lemon-scented ammonia and lemon-sented dish soap.Spray three times a week early in the morning or late in the evening . this will keep the little buggers away i did try this an it did work. Post by nan80 RE: Mosquito Repellent PlantsPerson who posted "Mosquito Repellent Plants IS A MYTH should read the article they posted. Clarify your misinformation while posting plz. Many plants work, when the leaves are crushed. Post By i can read (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent PlantsRosemary bushes worked and I didn't realize it till I threw away three dead bushes. Within minutes of putting them in a trash bag, I sat down for a cup of tea on my back patio and suddenly was swarmed by mosquito's, and covered in bites. then I pulled the dead and backened bushes out of the trash, and set them back on the patio. The Rosemary smell is very powerful from the bushes and insantly my troubles were over! Once again I was enjoying drinking my tea - bite free! Amazingly I see no reference to the Rosemary as a strong repellent on this site - but it certainly is. Post By Trisha Livingston (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent PlantsI know this is going to sound weird, but it works! One day sitting on the patio at one of my favorite El Salvadoran restaurants, I noticed gallon size baggies of what appeared to be water hanging in the trees. I asked the waiter what they were there for and he said they kept the mosquitoes away. He did not know how, but he said that was what they did at home (in El Salvador). Sure enough, I, whom my family refers to as their mosquito repellent, did not have a single bite! I hung bags in my back yard and had my first (nearly) bite free summer! Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent Plants
To Darryl Touchet Post By JW in Georgia (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent Plants
There are no plants that just sit there and smell ENOUGH too repell insects. it is a myth. You have to damage the leaves of the plants to release there smell. Sometimes, right after a rain, they smell, but on normal days, they have no significant factor. Post By Darryl Touchet (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent PlantsThis web site is great. Thank you to all who have put their ideas and suggestions forward. We just bought a house that have fish ponds and we are having terrible trouble with mozzies. i shall definitely try some mozzie repellent plants you have suggested. Thanks. Post By marie from melbourne australia (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent Plants
I sell Avon and have used their new spray: Post By Sarah (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent Plants
I think skeeters can be pretty bad in the tropics, and there are some herbal remedies that work. Post By DC (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent PlantsWhere could I purchase these plants? Post By GAP (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent Plants
i am glad someone posted this thinking of gardening this year and we get TONS of mosquitos and black flies and Horse flies here in Hudson, maine it is awful.. Post by mainemom207 RE: Mosquito Repellent Plants- MYTH
Mosquito Repellent Plants IS A MYTH !!!! Post By Enter your name. (Guest Post) RE: Mosquito Repellent Plants
Marigolds! Save the seeds and replant next year, also... they'll come up in mixed vibrant colors of the sunset, which you can enjoy without being bitten by mosquitos. We plant in a long planter just in front of the porch. Not a fragrant flower, but beautiful and a good mosquito repellant, for sure. Post by tismom RE: Mosquito Repellent PlantsTry citronella, which is a type of geranium. This is what they use in mosquito-repelling oils and lamps. The best thing is prevention, find out where they are breeding and get rid of the water! Post By Cathy (Guest Post) |
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