π Bug-Be-Gone from the Field of Master Mind Herbs (MMHRB) πΏ
Shared from the research of: Joseph Mercado π¨
Content Contributor: Pro.com π
To: Health Lover π±
Blog Post #1041 π
Re: Natural Insect Repellent π¨
Date and Time: Sunday, October 18, 2020 at 5:16 p.m. β°
Dear Herbal Lover,
The weather is turning warmer and the outdoors beckons.
But, with warm temperatures come insects that can bother you and your family.
They can munch on your garden and plants, infest dry good or show up around drains and sinks. Instead of reaching for the can of bug repellent or insecticide, consider using these herbs as a natural insect repellent.
You can plant the recommended selections in your yard or grow them in containers inside or outside so that you can move them around the home, patio and yard as you need them.
1. Mint
Mint will repel ants, fleas, moths, beetles, aphids and mice β which will help keep your dog healthy, too.
Caution: cats love mint, so plant it where you donβt mind them hanging out.
Once you plant it, it will grow every season, and even take over a bit of your garden, so plan accordingly, or plant in a container.
Use the leaves for mint tea, cooking Moroccan-inspired dishes, and for mojitos or mint juleps to cool off in the summer heat.
2. Basil
Basil is so useful. It will naturally repel insects like mosquitoes and flies.
Not only will Basil prevent the unwanted buzzing around your head, you can pick out a few from the garden to put with some tomatoes to go into your salad with some fresh mozzarella cheese.
There are many different scents, so experiment with what you like.
3. Bay Leaves
What a relief to know you can keep roaches away with bay leaves, and then use the dried leaves in stock for soups and stews, or use as the basis of an herb wreath.
4. Catnip
Not only will your cats love it, but a mixture of catnip and rosemary can make a spray or oil to ward off mosquitoes.
Add some lemon balm to boost the potency.
5. Lemon Balm
In addition to adding it to your mosquito repellent, you can brew tea to relieve stress.
6. Dill
Not just for Grandmaβs pickles, dill will naturally repel insects such as aphids, squash bugs and spider mites.
Use the fresh stuff on salmon when you grill or bake it, or in dips.
7. Lavender
Adding beauty to a garden or yard as well as fragrant functionality, lavender repels moths, fleas and flies, including mosquitoes.
Dry it and use it in little cloth bags as sachets in your drawers, or fill a rectangular piece of cloth for a soothing eye pillow.
Dried lavender can also be hung in bundles and hung near dried goods to ward off insects.
8. Rosemary
Another hardy herb, once you plant it, it will grow nearly year round in milder climates, and then reappear each spring.
Use it to repel cabbage loopers, carrot flies, slugs, snails and the Mexican bean beetle.
Add some sprigs to flower arrangements (it means βrememberanceβ), and you can use the hardy stalks as skewers on the grill, in meat dishes (particularly lamb), and even throw some on hot coals for an aromatic grill.
9. Thyme
Shoo away the cabbage looper, cabbage maggot, corn earworm, whiteflies and tomato hornworm with this herb.
Use it in poultry or seafood dishes when you want to take them in a Greek or Italian direction.
Itβs also great when making Provencal dishes like ratatouille.
10. Garlic
Say goodbye to a host of pests when you plant garlic including aphids, the Japanese beetle, carrot flies, codling moths, snails, root maggots, cabbage loopers, the Mexican bean beetle, peach tree borers and rabbits.
Use fresh garlic to add depth and flavor to just about any dish: soup stocks, sauces, crushed fresh for bruschetta and in marinades.
Content Source: Pro.com
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