Comment Re:Brah (Score 1) 28
I'm what you might describe as a 7 out of 10 for mosquitoes. They sure go for me, but not as much as some other people (I might even be a 5-6 nowadays, apparently they're not so bothered about old farts as they are for younger fresher meat?)
Things I've found that help are:
1) Grow lavender, verbena and other things mosquitoes don't like around your house. Fancy hotels are masters of this - go look around their gardens and copy what they do (or if you can't be bothered to do that, try google). The bees will love you, the mosquitos won't (if you find anything that attracts dragon/damsel flies, then go with that too - they eat mosquitoes). I guess you could even get a bat box - bats like a nice mosquito too.
2) Ditch your flowery fruity shower gel and go for something citrus or maybe that pepperminty stuff that tingles a bit
3) Get a tan. I don't tan easily, and I expend almost no effort getting a tan when I go on holiday, but they seem to go for me less when I've at least been a bit "sun exposed" rather than my usual pastey darkened room dwelling geek self. Maybe it's the vitamin D or something?
I'm sure diet has something to do with it too - but I've never really isolated what's what. I'd imagine sugary sweet carbohydrate foods are attractive, where onions and garlic aren't. Maybe start throwing a bit of garlic into just about anything you cook...?
I've also found that whilst the deet based sprays and things work really well, they're so horrible to you and the environment that I don't use them. There is a bug spray that's in a pump bottle - I forget the name, but it's in a black bottle with a picture of a mosquito on the front with a line through it. That stuff smells worse than your uncle's ill-advised after shave, but it works really well.
Lastly, I'm sure you know what you're doing, but those blue light bug zapper things *attract* bugs in order to keep them away from your kitchen or whatever. Could they actually be counter-productive?