When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: scent that keeps mosquitoes away naturally youtube

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. These Plants and Herbs Will Actually Repel Mosquitoes - AOL

    www.aol.com/plants-herbs-actually-repel...

    Lavender. While many of us love the smooth and clean scent of lavender, mosquitoes just don't feel the same. Actually, the linalool odor is detestable to mosquitos, moths, flies, fleas, and other ...

  3. These Insanely Helpful Garden Plants Keep the Mosquitoes Away

    www.aol.com/insanely-helpful-garden-plants-keep...

    Sage is one of the few plants that has research to suggest it can actually keep mosquitoes away. One study found that just one pot of sage can give up to 32% protection from some types of mosquitoes.

  4. The Best Mosquito Repellents to Keep Those Pesky Bugs Away - AOL

    www.aol.com/best-mosquito-repellents-sprays-keep...

    Instead, it has a light citrus scent that rapidly fades away while the picaridin-based formula works to keep mosquitoes, ticks, gnats, chiggers, fleas, and biting flies at bay for up to 12 hours.

  5. List of pest-repelling plants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_pest-repelling_plants

    repels flies, including mosquitoes [2] [4] the carrot fly, asparagus beetles and whiteflies [3] Borage: repels tomato hornworm and cabbage worms [2] Castor bean: repels moles [3] Catnip: repels ants, flea beetles, aphids, the Japanese beetle, squash bugs, weevils, [2] the Colorado potato beetle, the cabbage looper, [3] and cockroaches. [4] May ...

  6. Hate mosquitoes? Coconut scents could help keep them away ...

    www.aol.com/news/hate-mosquitoes-coconut-scents...

    The scent in the cup that attracted the most mosquitoes was deemed most attractive, and the results surprised the scientists. All four soaps contained limonene, a compound found in citrus that is ...

  7. Attractive toxic sugar baits - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Attractive_toxic_sugar_baits

    By mimicking the scent of sugar-providing plants that are naturally attractive to mosquitoes, it is possible to attract the mosquitoes to insecticide-laden traps. The traps can be set next to areas with significant mosquito populations (e.g., reservoirs, roadside drainage ponds and culverts). [1]