[pct-l] REPELLING MOSQUITOES AND TICKS
Edward Anderson
mendoridered at yahoo.com
Mon Feb 13 09:53:01 CST 2012
Plan ahead. I always had insect repellant cloths with long sleeves and pants. I had no problem with either mosquitoes or over-exposure to the sun.
HYOH.
________________________________
From: Diane Soini of Santa Barbara Hikes <diane at santabarbarahikes.com>
To: pct-l at backcountry.net
Sent: Monday, February 13, 2012 7:00 AM
Subject: Re: [pct-l] REPELLING MOSQUITOES AND TICKS
All these tricks are lovely, but once your hike has commenced, if you
did not buy that stuff in advance, it's very hard to acquire. And
just try to treat your clothing with chemicals out on the trail.
Depending on where you are, you may not have access to a washing
machine. If you are taken by surprise, lack resources (money or time
to wait for mail) or just don't want the chemicals, hiking in a
cotton T-shirt won't hurt you in the summer. Honest, it is quiet
comfortable and it's really easy to find them in stores. Nor will a
pink tie-dyed hippie skirt over your pants hurt you. You might get
some odd looks if you are a guy though, so perhaps light tights will
keep the proboscises out. Or you can do the method that some guys on
the trail wearing shorts and t-shirts did: wipe the brow, wipe the
neck, wipe the left arm then the right, wipe the hem of the shorts of
one leg, then the other, wipe down one leg, then the other, repeat.
Another guy used his PCT bandana to whip himself all over. Looked
exhausting. Like flogging yourself on a pilgrimage.
On Feb 12, 2012, at 8:55 PM, Nathan Miller wrote:
> You could also try eating garlic...LOTS of garlic! Mosquitoes have
> a very narrow range of smell. Blocking and confusing their
> olfactory senses is the basis of repellents. If they land on you,
> they'll still bite you, no matter what you're wearing, but they
> have to find you first! With raw garlic, you also get all those
> other great health benefits!
>
> -Nate the Trail Zombie
>
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