How To Keep Mosquito From Entering Your Home

Filed Under (Blackout Window Blinds, Blinds Shades, Cheap Mini Blinds, Curtains Blinds) by Janet London on 04-03-2010

Tagged Under : affordable blinds and shades, bed bugs, blackout window blinds, blinds and shades, blinds shades, Cheap mini blinds, Curtains Blinds, Home Improvements, mosquito, pest control, pest management, pests, rats, termite, window blinds, window treatments and coverings

Mosquitoes are insects that transmit disease-causing viruses and parasites from one person to another without getting disease themselves. They are transmitters of deadly diseases such as dengue, malaria, etc. Only female mosquitoes are capable of drinking blood. Actually, female mosquitoes do not drink blood for their survival, they drink blood for additional substances like protein and iron to produce eggs. Through drinking blood from one animal to another, they carry detrimental bacteria.

Before finding means of controlling mosquitoes, we should discover first their life cycle. There are four stages in mosquitoes’ life cycle: egg, larva, pupa, and adult or imago. Adult females lay their eggs in water, which can be a salt-marsh, a lake, a puddle, a natural reservoir on a plant, or an artificial water container such as a plastic bucket. The first three stages are aquatic and last 5-14 days, depending on the species and the surrounding temperature; eggs hatch to become larvae, then pupae. The adult mosquito comes out from the pupa as it floats at the water surface. Adult females can live up to a month but most of them do not survive more than 1-2 weeks.

Now, we all know that mosquitoes can survive and thrive in stagnant water and dark places. So keep your house clean and free from stagnant water that will be formed. Clean your drainage and pipelines regularly. Make sure that there are no leaks.

In places near bodies of water like pond, get rid of all floating rubbles and other solid waste material from the water. These garbages can provide a productive area for mosquitoes. Production of mosquito-eating fish can also help control the mosquitoes.

If mosquito problem is too great in your area, you can utilize insecticides and repellants. You can also ask your local municipality to undertake mosquito prevention programme in your area.

Learn more about the most effective methods of eradicating bed bugs and other pests from your homes or offices. Get a totally unique version of this article from our article submission service

-

More on the Topic of Blackout Window Blinds, Shades, Treatments and Coverings

Blinds Shades – Choose from a wide variety of selections of the best, cheap and affordable blinds and shades for your home décor and enhancements

Cheap Mini Blinds – You can find cheap mini blinds from amongst the best and tending style of mini blinds and shades

Curtains Blinds – Learn how you can get the best and cheapest curtains and blinds for your window treatments and coverings

Thanks

Blackout Window Blinds

share save 171 16 How To Keep Mosquito From Entering Your Home

Plant Protection And Soil Treatment Methods

Filed Under (Home Improvements) by Gary Antosh on 14-02-2010

Tagged Under : garden, gardening, home improvement, Home Improvements, pest, pest control

Most of us have been discouraged at one time or another because a favorite house plant died or did not look its best. Perhaps the use of unsterilized soil was to blame.

Proper soil treatment, either by heat or chemicals, can destroy all kinds of soil-borne pests: fungi, nematodes, bacteria, insects and weed seeds.

Many common ailments of house plants can be traced to using soil or pots contaminated with pests which rot, chew and suck away the roots, crown or bulb. This prevents water and nutrients from reaching the leaves and flowers. Such plants may appear unhealthy or may wilt, wither away and die. The same soil-borne pests may rot seeds or cuttings, or cause young seedlings to suddenly wilt and topple over (called damping-off).

Soil treatment can be regarded as cheap insurance that your house plants have a fair chance to grow, look their best, and bloom.

The easiest and most effective way to disinfect your soil and pots is by heating. Heat treatment at the right temperature and for the correct length of time destroys all five major kinds of pests, and leaves no long-lasting toxic residues in the soil, as some chemical treatments occasionally do. But be careful to avoid overheating, particularly with steam or dry heat. Otherwise the physical structure of the soil may be broken down and excess soluble salts may be released, resulting in harmful side effects.

Heat Sterilization

To heat your soil properly, follow these steps:

1. Prepare the soil as for planting. Add the sand, peat moss or other materials you wish in the final potting mixture. The soil should be loose, free of coarse debris and lumps, and just moist enough for planting. Don’t have it so wet that it sticks together when squeezed in your hand.

To be sure (the first time) you have done a thorough job of sterilizing, scatter in a handful of oat or ryegrass seed while mixing the soil. If seedlings pop up after sterilization, while the soil is airing, you know that you slipped up somewhere. Incompletely sterilized soil is frequently more hazardous to use than non-sterilized soil. Harmful microorganisms have less competition and hence grow quickly throughout the soil and attack plants.

2. Spread the soil from one to three inches deep in a cooking pan or wooden flat and bake in a 200 degree oven for one hour. Clay pots, wooden containers and pot labels can be placed on top. They should be sterilized, too. Plastic pots are easily sterilized by washing in hot, soapy water. The soil can also be put directly in the pots and baked in the oven as above.

A home canning-type pressure cooker can also be used or the soil can be put on a rack above boiling water in a large, covered wash boiler or kettle. If a pressure cooker is used set the valve at ten pounds pressure. For three-inch pots of soil heat for ten minutes; four-inch. 15 minutes; six-inch, 30 minutes. If using the boiling water method without steam pressure double the time intervals.

3. After heat sterilization stir the soil’ thoroughly and water it for several days before planting. Be careful not to recontaminate the soil with microscopic pests by avoiding dirty surfaces or utensils and diseased plant material.

Become acquainted for yourself why so many landscape designers specify large outdoor planters Visit http://www.riverside-plastics.com to learn more about large planters.

share save 171 16 Plant Protection And Soil Treatment Methods