On Mangoes and Mosquitoes
Mangoes have gone but
mosquitoes are in. This year the market was full of a variety of the king of
fruits. But the quality was not up to the mark. Price varied from Rs 30 to
about 150 per kg. I tried many varieties, not very satisfied, though.
Mosquitoes have arrived. I
don’t like mosquitoes but they like me. I have lamented earlier at length about
repellants, coils, skin creams, patches, incense sticks, liquid dispensers,
mats and what not. Of all the anti-mosquito items I found citronella agarbattis
best. Each stick lasts for about 15-20 minutes but you can see these insects coming
in swarms and dying like rain. It is effective if you use it in early hours of
invasion. Even plain camphor pills kept on electric mats is fine. Plus you get pleasant
aroma. A two percent mixture of camphor
in coconut oil serves as pain reliever and mosquito repellant.
There is a strong myth in
Kenya and other countries that mangoes and mosquitoes are related. That if you
eat mangoes mosquitoes will be attracted and their byte will lead to malaria.
This is not true. I have seen flies coming out mango but not mosquito.
Body odor, sweat, body
movement, body heat are all invitations to mosquito: they will come dancing
from far off distances. Carbon dioxide is a good attractant; place a source of
carbon dioxide in a place where you want these pests go to. Placing clover stuck in lemon in corners of
the room is a home remedy.
I thought a poet is no poet
if he has not written about moon. It appears to be true in the case of ubiquitous
mosquito too. https://www.poetrysoup.com/poems/mosquito
gives several hundreds of poems. From
the poems I gather that while in India we face mosquito menace during rainy
season, westerners seem to suffer in summer. Just a sample before I leave, a short
one from Char Ron Smith:
I've been single too long
Obviously
That a mosquito is the only female
that wants to take a bite of me
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Haiku I wrote some years ago:
ReplyDeleteStagnant water stinks
Mosquitoes announce their arrival
by ringing and stinging