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ALASKAN MOSQUITOES.

Mosquitoes in the icebound northern country are a plague beyond relief. They come to life' about the middle of May, before the ground 'is thawed out, . and while many feet, of ice still covers -the lakes and all 'but the swiftest rdvers. Stagnant sun-heated water is not in the. least necessary. . They breed in the glaciers wherever a bit, of earth or manure has melted > a littles pool. Their wrigglers are seen in running ice water. By the Ist of. June it is uncomfortable to. sleep without protection, and. from that time 6n> until September, when the first frosts have benumbed them, especially during the warm, rainy season of July and August, they become a neverceasing scourge^'s-waTming: -i n 'thousands. The Alaskan mosquito is small, brown,, silent, and very much in earnest. He never sings a; warning nor fools about selecting a spot to his taste, but, says a sufferer, comes in a bee-line with his probe -and gets into action. Every inch of your clothing is 'industriously bored, so that you look like an' animated brown cocoon, and the slightest exposed spot on wrist or neck is promptly set, on fire. I experimented with a small . hole in my glove. After the first mosquito had found the opening the others came in quick succession to the,, spot. He left some '''kind lady and no dog" sign there. If I killed the first and left his carcase it served as a warning not at all. The others came the faster, and the more I killed the more eager the survivors became,, perching quite unmoved on the remains of their confreres.

Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KCC19150206.2.40

Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka

King Country Chronicle, Volume IX, Issue 743, 6 February 1915, Page 7

Word count
Tapeke kupu
272

ALASKAN MOSQUITOES. King Country Chronicle, Volume IX, Issue 743, 6 February 1915, Page 7

ALASKAN MOSQUITOES. King Country Chronicle, Volume IX, Issue 743, 6 February 1915, Page 7

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