SOUNDS TO
FALL ASLEEP BY
A month ago
we were in the middle of a plague. The
ten plagues God set on Egypt to convince Pharaoh to let his people go had
nothing on the mosquito population we were enduring at the end of June. It was bad.
So bad, in
fact, that I had a wish come true.
For years
and years I had wanted to equip our yard, with its naturally occurring mosquito
breeding ground, with a high tech remedy to destroy the hordes that Mother
Nature is so generous with.
I’m not a fan of spraying poison into the
environment, so that solution wasn’t going to happen. They say that pouring a little gas on their
breeding pond will asphyxiate the nymphs, but I’m not a fan of having a
flammable pond on the premises, and besides … do you know what gas costs these
days? Face book was full of testimonials
about how a mix of stale beer, blue mouthwash and Epsom salts would drive the
bugs away, but really? Who lets beer go
stale? The alternative was to spray our
bodies down with probably poisonous, probably flammable, and most assuredly
stinky-as-stale-beer insect repellant and hope for the best.
For years
my dream has been a bug zapper.
Now, just
for the record, normally I’m a fairly nice person. I’m the live-and-let-live type. Oh sure, I have lower tolerances for things
like yappy little dogs and rude people, but I don’t derive pleasure from
fantasies of their electrocution. It’s
different with mosquitoes, though: I want them all to die painful, horrible
deaths. My apologies to everyone whom I’ve
offended with this hate speech.
I don’t
know what tipped the scales this year.
Like I said, I’ve wanted a bug zapper for ages, but I could never sell
the idea to the guy who would be expected to install it. Maybe his change of heart came after inhaling
one too many mosquitoes, but suddenly he wanted one too. It was one of the most instant purchases I’ve
ever made; there would be no backing out.
Who knew
the difficulty level of installing a bug zapper would be so high? First there was lengthy discussion on where
it should go. I said mid yard and he
said closer to the house. I won because
the power source from a decommissioned well was already in place. Secondly, a pole had to be erected. That was the part that had held this
operation off for years. I left it
completely in the man’s hands: he chose drill stem for the job and commenced
fancying it up with ornamental welding and artwork. An entire generation of mosquitoes died of
old age waiting for his masterpiece to be finished.
The
installation of the pole was another adventure.
He drilled his hole only to tangle the auger in wire and hose from the
old well. We unraveled that mess and
moved over two feet. The ground was so
saturated we ended up with mini well, a third move was required. Once the hole was ready we discovered how
heavy twenty feet of fancy drill stem, and how inaccurate a wife’s hand signals
can be when guiding pole delivering tractors.
(Ah! More of those lovey dovey
memories!)
Even after
the pole was planted there were adjustments to be made … being as he had topped
it off with a weathervane we thought it would be a nice touch if south actually
pointed south.
By the time
all this had been accomplished the yard was a mess of tractor tire ruts
requiring multiple loads of topsoil to level it out. Some folks would see this as a mess but I consider
it a bonus. I have claimed the whole
area as my newest garden area, planted two shrubs, and told him to be on the
lookout for a big flat rock.
But the
sweetest thing is that the bug zapper works, just like I had always dreamed
of. The first couple mornings the dirt
beneath the light was strewn with the carcasses of many many mosquitoes. By day three the wire mesh that delivers the
voltage was full of baked on bug bodies.
It took a few days for the wind to knock them loose, but it didn’t seem
to slow down the death toll.
It’s been a
month now. The mosquito population is
way down, but so is the stagnant water they deliver their babies in. Also, their natural predators, the dragon
flies, are building up their population.
There’s no way to tell which of these factors has had the most impact,
all I know is that life is much more pleasant now. And it’s not only the freedom from flying
hordes of blood suckers that makes me happy, it’s also the faint bzzt bzzt that
I hear as I drift off to sleep, thinking to myself “And another one bites the
dust!”
I have been talking about getting one of these lol loved hearing the story about putting it up... makes me dread the day when we actually get one haha
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