As events cancel everywhere because of coronavirus, millions are left taking unanticipated “staycations.” They’ve also been reacquainted with an all-too-regular outdoor visitor: mosquitoes.
If your property has random dead patches, or leaves on your trees look like something attacked them with a scissors, chances are you can point the finger at Japanese beetles.
Come late spring or early summer, you probably can't wait to get out on your watercraft. Be aware that you might have some unanticipated company.
The hits just keep coming, in the form of more unwelcomed six-legged visitors whose real home is across the waters.
A surge of offensive bugs has washed over our Ozaukee County neighborhood Pewaukee and Wisconsin in the past two decades: the Japanese beetle and gypsy moth to name a few. All are native to foreign countries. All have caused environmental and economic havoc in the United States, where no natural predators exist to control them.
Tired of having to continually clean webbing off the side of the building? Or, worse yet, power wash or paint every few years to get rid of accumulated webs?
Something crawling on your body usually causes a variety of reactions: irritated at best, downright scary at worst.
In a world of uninvited crawling critters, ticks might be the most unwelcome of all.
Occasionally, believe it or not, more is really less. Mosquito repellent spraying is a prime example.
Consider fertilizing your lawn. Do you really need six or seven applications? Of course not. Starter fertilizer in the spring, weed and feed in summer, and winterizer in the fall. Any more, and you risk doing more harm than good.
Ticks are disgusting insects. They can be hazardous, too. The pinhead-size deer tick (one of two tick species in this area) can harbor Lyme disease.
The Mosquito Guy's green and safe backyard treatment will keep away ticks which can carry Lyme disease but will not harm kids, bees, butterflies or earthworms.
Lake McHenry