Deccan Chronicle

THERE ARE MANY HUMANE AND HARMLESS WAYS TO KEEP INSECTS AT BAY AT YOUR HOME

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close the windows of the house just before sunset. If you have a little green patch, plant a lemon tree in it or in a pot outside your window or door. Another plant mosquitoes hate is tomato. A row of tomato plants on your windowsill keeps them away.

A not-so-great idea is to smoke neem leaves over a coal fire and take the smoking leaves through the rooms. In villages, this is what they do in cattle sheds when the day ends.

If you are having a party and you want to get rid of mosquitoes so your guests do not go home early, try putting a few drops of citronella in water, soak a few ribbons in it a day earlier, and hang the ribbons on bushes and tree branches around the area.

There is a company in Hyderabad that has biogenetic­ally invented a plant called Citrosa. This plant has been in use for many years in Europe under another name (Citroen geranium). You place Citrosa near a window where shaded light falls and it can get fresh air. It grows easily and becomes bushy. It keeps mosquitoes out of the house. You can pluck a few leaves and use them as protection when you go out. It has a very sweet fragrance.

Nepal has a herb called loban, which is sold as a paste ball. In the evenings it is lit and the smoke is taken through each room to keep the mosquitoes out.

Then comes the pocha, which is used to clean the floors every day. Lots of people use phenyl as an antimicrob­ial but it causes liver cancer, dizziness, headaches, and is also very dangerous for the poor woman who comes to clean your house. In my house we use only water. And that is all you need. A fresh bucket of water for each room and a clean pocha and everything remains sparkling and insects keep away. Every now and then we add a spoonful of eucalyptus oil, which keeps the house fragrant and also keeps insects away, including flies and cockroache­s.

Cockroache­s can also be kept away with other methods: Make a ball of flour and water. Add a few drops of cedar wood oil, sandalwood and patchouli oil. Make little balls and place them in cupboards and drains. If you put neem oil with carom seeds (ajwain) and camphor in the drain or around it, they won’t come out. The first and obvious thing to do is keep the kitchen and storage areas clean.

Keep ants out of your sugar jars by putting tejpatta leaves in them. Keep them out of the house by using sindoor lines around where they enter. To keep ants out, see where they come from and draw a Lakshman rekha of chilli powder or turmeric powder (haldi). Another thing they hate is peppermint oil. Just put two drops at the entrances to your house or wherever they enter from and see them disappear. Mice hate peppermint as well. So you can put it any place you think mice may come in.

Termites and other insects stay out of your books, wood and clothes if you polish the wood with neem oil. You should keep neem or tulsi or morpankhi leaves inside books and in the clothes cupboard. Lavender oil or cedar wood oil also keeps insects away from your clothes.

Use neem leaves in your cupboard and under your carpet to keep all insects out. Dry the leaves and then put them in your warm clothes, books, and grain. Get rid of houseflies that hover over the table by wiping the table with a little salt water before and after the meal. In the South, when they eat sitting on the ground, the ritual is that before the meal is served the eater draws a line around his plate with water. This serves the same purpose.

Do you have white ants in the garden? A very easy way to get rid of them is to grow a banana tree. Again, this has been converted into mythology — that it was to keep evil spirits away. No, it was to make sure that the termites disappeare­d before the foundation was laid.

If you like walking in the evening but are bothered by insects, or you want to eat out in your garden but don’t want to spend time scratching yourself, you can grow, in pots, the morpankhi, which has green oblong shaped seeds. In the villages, they take the seed and rub it over their arms or any exposed area. All insects stay away. The seed does not smell.

What you think is a pest serves a purpose in nature. Even the mosquito is an important food for many insects and birds. The moth is a pollinator of plants. The cockroach serves the role that a vulture does: he is the scavenger of the sewers and keeps them free of other dirt. I haven’t figured out what the rat does — except serve as a food for the snake! Keeping them away is easier and better than killing them with chemicals. All violence is harmful to humans and insecticid­es prove my point!

Remember, spiders and lizards are not pests. Spiders are completely harmless and are there to kill mosquitoes and flies, so leave them be. Lizards are meant to kill mosquitoes, flies and spiders so leave them be as well. People should stop poisoning themselves in the name of “cleanlines­s” and the world they live in. (The author is Union minister for women and child developmen­t and animal-cum-nature lover)

WHAT YOU THINK IS A PEST SERVES A PURPOSE IN NATURE. KEEPING PESTS AWAY IS EASIER AND BETTER THAN KILLING THEM WITH CHEMICALS. ALL VIOLENCE IS HARMFUL TO HUMANS AND INSECTICID­ES PROVE MY POINT!

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