In summer, mosquitoes cause discomfort, making it difficult to work on their site or relax in nature. Protecting yourself from mosquitoes in summer is the number one problem for many, since mosquito bites can cause dermatitis, swelling of the skin, constant itching or even allergies in a person.
Instructions
Step 1
You can protect yourself from bells with folk remedies. This will require tomato bushes. Mosquitoes do not tolerate the smell of tomato leaves and immediately fly away, only smelling it.
Step 2
The most common wheatgrass will help to reliably protect yourself from midges. Taking a handful of wheatgrass roots, pour liters of water and boil until the broth takes on a light yellow color. Rub it on exposed parts of the body.
Step 3
Mosquitoes cannot stand the smell of cloves, eucalyptus, anise and cedar. You can smear these plants with oil on exposed areas of the body.
Step 4
Another remedy is dried chamomile. You can shred it, put it in a bag and carry it with you. Chamomile damages the nerve cells of the bellies, but it is harmless to humans.
Step 5
You can take juniper needles, pine or spruce cones, camphor and set it on fire. The smell will quickly spread and closer than five meters, midges will not fly up.
Step 6
But not everyone will want to use folk remedies to combat bloodsucking. There are two broad classes on the market for mosquito control and protection: insecticides and repellents. Each of these classes is divided into groups.
Step 7
One of the groups is electromechanical means for the destruction of bloodsucking. The main means of this group is the anti-mosquito lamp. The light from the ultraviolet lamp attracts mosquitoes and other flying insects, which are instantly killed by hitting the high-voltage grid, which is hidden in the middle of the lamp.
Step 8
There are also mosquito-killing chemicals, or fumigators. These are solid, gaseous or liquid chemicals.
Step 9
There are also ultrasonic means of scaring off bloodsucking. They were created quite recently, and they are the most effective in terms of protecting and fighting midges, both in nature and at home. Its principle of operation is based on the fact that only those female bellies who need food to carry the next generation of mosquitoes bite. The repeller mimics the sound of male mosquitoes to attract female mosquitoes for fertilization. However, fertilized females can no longer tolerate this sound, and they try to fly away from it as far as possible.