MOSQUITO METER from the trail head at Congaree Swamp National Park in South Carolina photo by Jonathan Schechter |
Flesh-eating beasts have shared the landscape with Homosapiens since our earliest days. They have left lasting impressions on our behavior as they emerged like doom from dark forboding forests to hunt us, to kill us, and then to feast on our flesh. And in many ways it was the very presence of these predators that made us truly human, and sent the message to be self-aware and wary, for when confronted by "Monsters of God" we must adapt or die. That is evolution. That is the way of nature.
A month of rains and sultry heat on the first day of June has set the stage for encounters with the most ferocious, ravenous and blood-thirsty monster of all: The mosquito! These ravenous blood sipping young ladies - who won't take no for an answer - and can transmit West Nile Virus are about to emerge from puddles, ponds, pools, urban ditches and flooded farm fields. The only thing on their mind will be a meal of blood. And if Oakland County had mosquito meters like those at Congaree Swamp National Park in the bug rich midlands of South Carolina I would turn the dial to a notch above RUTHLESS for this coming weekend.
NOTE: If you like Earth's Almanac you should read Monsters of God by David Quammen. This brilliant writer blends science fact with high drama and leave you with haunting images and a better understanding of species that like humans - - as entrees made easy. His book, the nudging of an ER nurse, and mosquito larvae wiggling by the hundreds in my bird bath inspired today's blog.
So how do we protect ourselves from these villians?
ReplyDeleteKris Harris
Ortonville,MI
Yes, it's that special time of year during a year of exceptional spring moisture.
ReplyDeleteKim: The best non-chemical way: Cover up or don't go out in the woods. The best chemical way: Deet.
D.R. - Grawn, MI
And to those that asked me: Yes, tha congaree swamp meter is real! Congaree Swamp is a wonderful place, was a national monument, now a national park where boardwalks take you over the very heart of skeeter country.
ReplyDeleteMosquitoes kill more humans annually than anything else on this planet. More than war, more than cancer, more than ANYTHING. Look it up, mosquito borne illness is IT! I'm a Buddhist and hate killing any living creature, but I make an exception for mosquitoes. I squash every single one of those bastards that I can, I'm fairly certain that for every one I kill I'm alleviating the suffering of at least 10 other creatures.
ReplyDelete