📋 Steps
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#1 — DEET 20-30% or picaridin 20% applied to skin
The highest evidence personal protection: 20-30% DEET or 20% picaridin applied to all exposed skin provides 4-6 hours protection. In CDC and military studies, these reduce bites by 97-99% during the protection window. Nothing else comes close for personal protection. Apply to all exposed skin not covered by clothing.
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#2 — Permethrin-treated clothing
Permethrin applied to clothing (or pre-treated clothing like Insect Shield) kills mosquitoes and ticks that land on fabric. Provides a second protection layer that works even when repellent wears off on skin. Lasts 6 wash cycles. Combine with skin repellent for maximum protection.
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#3 — Eliminate breeding sites on your property
Every container with standing water is a potential breeding site. Eliminating breeding sites reduces the local mosquito population continuously — no reapplication needed. More impactful than any spray program if done consistently.
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#4 — Monthly bifenthrin barrier spray on property vegetation
Bifenthrin applied to shrubs, vegetation, and lawn edges kills resting adult mosquitoes. Reduces mosquito pressure for 3-4 weeks per application. Highly effective when combined with breeding site elimination.
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#5 — Bti mosquito dunks in standing water
Bti (Mosquito Dunks) in water that can't be eliminated kills larvae. OMRI organic, safe for fish and wildlife. Each dunk treats 100 sq ft for 30 days. Complements breeding site elimination for water that must remain.
💡 Tips
- CO2 traps (Mosquito Magnet, Dynatrap) can be effective in enclosed outdoor spaces — less so in open areas where they compete with natural CO2 sources
- Citronella candles reduce bites by approximately 40% immediately downwind — marginally helpful but not protective
- Mosquito-repelling plants (citronella grass, lavender, catnip) have very limited evidence of effectiveness — the oils require concentration in a closed space, not ambient garden planting
- Bug zappers kill more beneficial insects than mosquitoes — female mosquitoes hunting blood don't respond to UV light the way flying beetles and moths do
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