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by author Jim Blair
When we approached the campsite, I noticed that Ron and his family were sitting outside at the picnic table and that the windows and door of the motor home were closed. “We’ll get dinner going in a few minutes, we’re just waiting for the air to clear,” Ron said. He noticed the bewildered look on my face. “I just fumigated the motor home because the mosquitoes were pretty thick and they were starting to bite.” When I asked him what he used to spray inside the motor home, he replied, “I don’t remember. Heck, it was just some product I picked up at a hardware store in Kamloops.” My cousin seemed somewhat surprised when I suggested that it might be healthier if we prepared our meal on the campfire and ate outside. When Ron finally ventured into the motor home to fetch the spray can and look at the ingredients, he was shocked to read the warning: Keep away from food, foodstuffs, and domestic water supplies. Inhalation: Harmful if inhaled. Do not use inside the home. Ron said that this would be the last time he would use a spray insect killer in his motor home or his house. He felt terribly about endangering his family’s health. As we drove down the main street of Kamloops, Ron pointed out a drugstore, “They’ll have insect repellent.” With a little persuasion, I was able to instead steer him into the natural health store a few doors away. Ron related his story about the commercial spray to the clerk and then asked, “Any ideas on what’s a good product?” The clerk replied that the store had several products that would dissuade the mosquitoes from attacking and the ingredients certainly wouldn’t endanger Ron’s family. The product selection, she related, included sprays, creams, solids (sticks), and liquids. The first product the clerk showed us contained neem oil. “Neem oil has been used for thousands of years for the repelling of insects,” she said, “and this product has an aloe vera base to relieve the itch of existing bites and also contains citronella and geraniol.” She showed us another product that boasted a host of ingredients: rosemary, thyme, lemongrass, geranium, peppermint, and soybean. The clerk smiled at Ron’s comment that the repellent sounded delicious and she informed us that the products were also effective in repelling other insects, as well. The clerk pointed some other repellents on the shelf. “These contain a variety of natural ingredients: cedar, verbena, pennyroyal, geranium, lavender, pine, cajeput, cinnamon, basil, allspice, and garlic.” After a short period of quiet deliberation and carefully reading the labels, my cousin chose the product with the neem oil. “Nature is beautiful,” he said with satisfaction as we drove back to the campground. “Even in insect repellents.” Surviving Mosquito Season
Source: Encyclopedia of Natural Healing (alive Books, 2002).
Source: alive #259, May 2004 |
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