Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where is this mosquito-free utopia?
At 7000’ in the Rockies. It’s dry, so there’s little standing water and the county also does mosquito abatement to prevent disease.
There are mosquitos in the wooded areas on the mountain, but there are few to none where I live. I’ve been bitten once or twice in the 7 years I’ve lived here. But if you go into the woods, you definitely need repellent.
Anonymous wrote:As soon as you get a mosquito bite and it starts to itch touch it with something that is as hot as you can stand, like the back of a metal spoon that has been in boiling water.
I find that to be the most effective way to get the itch to permanently go away.
Anonymous wrote:Where is this mosquito-free utopia?
Anonymous wrote:I’d vote for anyone, ANYONE who took this seriously. It’s in our power to drastically reduce this scourge
Anonymous wrote:I have always been a mosquito magnet. I cannot sit out on my front porch for more than two minutes before they show up, trying to gain access to my ankles and arms, and the tops of my feet. So yes, I do try to typically use bug spray which I hate. This summer however I feel like every mosquito bite I get is more itchy and intense than any summer prior and the the itchy, dark raised bumps seem to last for at least a week. Is there a new strain of mosquito in the Washington DC area that is responsible? Does anyone else feel like the mosquito bites they're getting this particular summer have been worse than in past summers? That first frost can't come soon enough.

Anonymous wrote:Yes, this is happening to my kid this year, and to a lesser degree to me.