tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8520271343841960320.post7026274158972130174..comments2023-05-18T01:11:15.586-07:00Comments on Owls' Knob... Tales of the Ozark Mountains: Among Mosquitoes, Only the Mothers Suck Blood.Roslyn Imriehttp://www.blogger.com/profile/17738933694691785571noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8520271343841960320.post-37830163234181117982010-10-24T15:45:41.822-07:002010-10-24T15:45:41.822-07:00Roslyn!
How delightful!! Thank you for sharing. I...Roslyn!<br /><br />How delightful!! Thank you for sharing. I've read every blog on your post, and can feel the expression of the land in your words.<br /><br />I do have an interesting tidbit about mosquitoes. My beloved Joe is never effected by them. He never feels their bites, and never has a remaining itchy mark. I began a search for why and found the following.<br /><br />You write true when you say it's only the female mosquito that drinks animal blood. After they've inserted their sharp needle-like straws and begin to drink, when you slap them into your skin, it ejects all the toxins and diseases it might be carrying directly into you. If you leave the mosquito to finish having her fill, when she draws out her needle-like straw, she also takes all her diseases with her. It's not the bite that infects humans with diseases like malaria. It is the act of killing them while they are connected to the skin. <br /><br />I used to get red, itchy mosquito bites. I used to slap every single one I felt. It felt like they would swarm all over me every time I stepped outside. One day, I decided to try something new. I began breathing deep and holding my hands together whenever I felt a mosquito land. I would wait the full minute while it drank my blood and fill it's little expanding red underbelly. I began examining each in increasing detail. I had never taken the time to really see a mosquito.<br /><br />When the mosquito finished, it withdrew its sharp straw, and I had no lingering itchy feeling, nor any trace the bite was made. I followed this delicate routine with every bite. Within the week, I stopped feeling anxious when they landed, and instead braced for the little needle insertion as if it were an expert acupuncturist.<br /><br />Within the month, I stopped noticing whether a mosquito bit or not. It has been two years now, and I am no longer effected by mosquitoes. No itchy bites taking days to heal. No anxiety when the mosquito lands. Now, we're just co-existing friends whenever I'm out. <br /><br />However, I do maintain my home with strict conditions to limit the mosquito population. I never leave upturned containers out that will provide excellent breeding grounds for mosquito larva in stagnant water. If I uncover such, I immediately turn it over. There are enough breeding grounds without me making more. Even as such, I have come to realize that mosquitoes are a very integral part of the animal food chain. Everything from hummingbirds to frogs feed on these little delicacies. A hummingbird can eat thousands in one day.<br /><br />Thank you for sharing your stories. I would love to read your book when it is completed.<br /><br />It's interesting that you've been focusing on writing these last few months, for so have I. My architect and I are writing a book on the beauty of attainable sustainability. We're both writing, I'm editing, and she's doing the drawings. It's a fun work to write, for it has been the focus of my life, and the inspiration for designing the CORE home - www.thecorehome.com. It's midway drafted to date.<br /><br />Please continue sharing your blogs with me. You are a sister to me, and I am happy to know kindred spirits that are reaching for the truth and freedom found in connecting with their home spaces.<br /><br />With love,<br />SarahSarah Perkinshttps://www.blogger.com/profile/10541952862162483797noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-8520271343841960320.post-85426047567412297602010-10-22T09:22:51.331-07:002010-10-22T09:22:51.331-07:00Only female mosquitoes of most species suck blood;...Only female mosquitoes of most species suck blood; male mosquitoes pollinate flowers. There are 2,700 different species of mosquitoes. In some mosquito species like the Toxorhynchites brevipalpis neither male nor female sucks blood. Instead they pollinate orchids in Ethiopia and eat other species of mosquito larva. <br />The female mosquitoes who suck blood don’t dabble in the act. The female mosquito needs the rich protein found in blood to generate the 2,000 eggs she lays in her short lifetime. If she is not killed, she drinks over two times her own weight. She sucks blood through her proboscis, which is like a hypodermic needle, while excreting saliva that keeps the blood from clotting and later causes the victim to itch. Bloodsucking is a necessary motherly instinct.<br />Sometimes malaria and other life threatening diseases seep down with the saliva into the victims’ blood. In tropical rain forests, mosquitoes are man’s worst enemies, carrying malaria, yellow fever, dengue, encephalitis, and filariasis. It can be said that mosquitoes, among other dangerous rainforest inhabitants, have protected the rain forests by keeping people out. This far north mosquitoes aren’t know to carry diseases, but mosquitoes, ticks, and chiggers keep people out of the Ozarks. These parasites protect the wild country here.Roslyn Imriehttps://www.blogger.com/profile/17738933694691785571noreply@blogger.com