Blog: The Gathering Place
by rudenski

Catnip Mosquito Repellent w/ Rosemary

Last year, several members of the Iowa State University Department of Entomology presented the results of a study on common catnip. Among their conclusions was the fact that an essential oil in catnip is 10 times more effective at repelling mosquitoes than potent chemicals such as DEET.

Date:   6/18/2006 10:40:24 AM   ( 18 y ) ... viewed 17305 times

Grow your own mosquito repellent

By ANN LOVEJOY
SPECIAL TO THE POST-INTELLIGENCER

The news is full of horror stories, including the spread of the West Nile Virus by mosquitoes. At the same time, a news item landed on my desk that seems to promise a simple, natural way to fend off the little buggers.

DEET is currently the most common active ingredient in commercial mosquito and bug repellents. Unfortunately, many studies indicate that DEET is also a dangerous chemical for humans, especially children. A study carried out at Duke University Medical Center revealed that DEET can cause brain-cell death and may trigger behavioral changes indicative of neurological damage in rats after frequent or prolonged use.

In an effort to find a safer alternative, the scientists investigated several plant essential oils that were commonly recommended as insect repellents by organic gardeners. Catnip ranks high on the list of natural bug-busters and evidently with good reason. In the Iowa study, the researchers noted that small doses of catnip oil were at least as effective at repelling mosquitoes as 10 times larger doses of DEET (which was used at typical recommended application rates for commercial products).

While the researchers don't know why mosquitoes don't like catnip oil, they do know a good thing when they see it. Recently, the Iowa State University Research Foundation applied for a patent for the use of catnip essential oils as compounds. Within a few years, we'll probably see many safe, non-toxic mosquito repellents on the market.

In the meantime, why not grow some mosquito repellent of your own? If you have a sunny, well-drained patch of lean garden soil, try planting some catnip. The plant you need is a perennial herb called Nepeta cataria. Closely related to ornamental catmint, or Nepeta faassenii (or N. mussinii), catnip is generally grown as a cat-pleasing or medicinal tea herb rather than for its looks.

Catnip is far from ugly, but its gentle blue flowers are definitely out-produced by its masses of softly hairy, gray-green foliage. Like most herbs, it prefers well-drained soil and plenty of sunlight. If you garden on heavy clay, you may succeed better with catnip and other herbs if you give them a mounded bed or grow them on a slope to improve winter drainage.

The first year you plant catnip, you may need to water it a time or two, especially if next summer is as hot and dry as this one has been. However, fall-planted herbs, including catnip, often need very little water the following summer. Fall and winter rains can help plants create deep, strong root systems that increase the natural drought resistance of catnip and many other herbs.

Don't feed your fall-planted herbs, but do mix some compost into their planting soil. A mix of half compost, half native soil is usually just right. Top off the soil with a light blanket of compost (2-3 inches) to help feed those actively growing roots through the cool months.

Even in spring, don't feed your herbs with anything but compost, or at most a mild all-purpose organic fertilizer such as Whitney Farms 5-5-5. Adding too much fertilizer can cause lush overgrowth in many herbs, leading to dilute or low-quality essential oil production. In some cases, herbs such as creeping thymes can be killed by commercial fertilizers, so when in doubt, use only a very mild fertilizer and apply it at half the suggested application rate.

This summer, I experimented with making both catnip vinegar spritzers and catnip infused oils. Both did a fine job of keeping mosquitoes and no-see-ums at bay during our warm summer evenings. If you would like to try this yourself, here are the simple recipes I used:


CATNIP MOSQUITO SPRITZ
MAKES ABOUT 3 CUPS

* 2 cups catnip, stemmed
* 3-4 cups mild rice vinegar

Rinse herbs, roll lightly with a rolling pin, then place them in a clean quart jar and cover with vinegar. Seal jar and store in a dark cupboard for two weeks.

Shake jar lightly every day or so for two weeks. Strain into a clean jar, seal and refrigerate for up to 6 months unused.

To use, spritz on exposed skin and around outdoor dining area.


CATNIP AND ROSEMARY MOSQUITO CHASING OIL
MAKES ABOUT 2 CUPS.

* 2 cups catnip, stemmed
* 1 cup rosemary, cut in 6-inch sprigs
* 2 cups grapeseed oil or any light body-care oil

Roll herbs lightly with a rolling pin and pack into a clean jar. Cover with oil, seal jar and place in a cool, dark cupboard for two weeks.

Shake jar lightly every day or so for two weeks. Strain into a clean jar, seal and refrigerate for up to 8 months unused.

To use, rub on exposed skin.

Add This Entry To Your CureZone Favorites!

Print this page
Email this page
DISCLAIMER / WARNING   Alert Webmaster


CureZone Newsletter is distributed in partnership with https://www.netatlantic.com


Contact Us - Advertise - Stats

Copyright 1999 - 2024  curezone.com

0.030 sec, (2)

Back to blog!
 
Add Blog To Favorites!
 
Add This Entry To Favorites!

Comments (20 of 92):
Re: Dr Karsch Oil … yivar… 5 mon
Re: then fly with … herri… 6 mon
Re: When the child… Nuha2… 27 mon
Re: then fly with … charl… 3 y
Re: People Friendl… Sysli… 14 y
Re: Non-Electric D… still… 14 y
Re: Singing rewire… ruden… 14 y
Re: Singing rewire… fledg… 14 y
Re: Baking Soda St… kermi… 15 y
Re: "Cognitive Dis… #3878… 15 y
Re: Deep Down Laug… ruden… 15 y
Re: Deep Down Laug… babag… 15 y
Re: Non-Electric D… #1188… 15 y
Re: Eating Weeds t… ruden… 15 y
Re: Eating Weeds t… light… 15 y
Re: Morning has br… ready… 15 y
Re: WayfaringStran… blues… 15 y
Re: Dr Karsch Oil … LFIRE 16 y
Re: Take From Thi… ruden… 16 y
Take From This Wha… #7676… 16 y
All Comments (92)

Blog Entries (12 of 100):
Catnip Mosquito Repellent w/…  18 y
my marvellous compost bin  18 y
what is kombucha tea?  18 y
Make Kombucha Tea  18 y
Vaccinations/Milk & My Fa…  18 y
I met God ( My Near Death Ex…  18 y
Prayer & Healing Touch  18 y
Born Free Lyrics  18 y
Pressure Cooker Distillery- …  18 y
Pond Bio-Filter  18 y
Non-Electric Distiller  18 y
Magic Carpet Dream- Sort of  18 y
All Entries (100)

Blogs by rudenski (8):
Peacemonger-Peacenik-Refuseni…  13 y  (73)
Cure for Diabetes  13 y  (15)
Chelation: How to remove Merc…  18 y  (11)
Oil Swishing & ACV  14 y  (8)
Iodine Research Blog  14 y  (1)
Fibromyalgia Cures  18 y  (1)
Chikungunya Virus Cure  18 y  (1)
Near Death Experience: Street…  19 y  (1)

Similar Blogs (10 of 185):
Son of Truth of Self  by Chef JeM  3 mon
My Enchanted Garden…  by Chef JeM  4 mon
ABCs of Conscious E…  by luckman  5 mon
The Role of English…  by AlisaSerikova  6 mon
Choose some interes…  by raxewal  6 mon
Recycling  by ExpertOK  11 mon
How Weighted Stuffe…  by WeightedAnimal  14 mon
Dreaming a New Real…  by lfire  15 mon
homeinfoprecisionus  by homeinfoprecisionus  18 mon
My Human Design  by Chef JeM  18 mon
All Blogs (1,019)

Back to blog!
 

Lugol’s Iodine Free S&H
J.Crow’s® Lugol’s Iodine Solution. Restore lost reserves.



Kidney Stones Remedy
Hulda Clark Cleanses