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I hate Mosquitos
#1
I hate Mosquitos 
Quote:Villages on the east coast of the Kamchatka peninsula, in the Russian Far-East are experiencing scenes that seem taken out of an Alfred Hitchkok movie. Only instead of birds invading their community, it’s billions of mosquitoes swirling into visible “tornadoes”.
Villages like Ust-Kamchatsk are used to being invaded by large number of mosquitoes every summer, it’s normal for this insects to swarm near bodies of water, but this year it’s much worse than usual. Because of an unusually hot summer, the number of mosquitoes is much larger, making them an even bigger nuisance than they usually are. Window and door nets do little to keep the pesky buzzers out of people’s homes, as they seem to get in through the smallest of cracks, and going outside means dealing with large swarms of mosquitoes that seem to reach the sky when seen from afar.

Photo: Komsomolskaya Pravda
“We have always had large numbers of mosquitoes here in the summer, and we always will, but there are just to many of them this year,” Ust-Kamchatsk resident Maria Zubkova said. “They get into every crack, even if there are nets on the windows, they still manage to get through.”
Videos of dozens of these mosquito tornadoes rising over villages on the east coast of Kamchatka have gone viral on Russian social media. They show these large whirlwinds visible from long distances, which wasn’t the case in past years. Locals are used to mosquitoes and midges invading their villages for a few months every years, but few can remember such large numbers.
 
Walking or driving through one of these living tornadoes will leave you covered in mosquitoes from head to toe, but experts say that people shouldn’t fear getting stung by them. The tornadoes are part of the mosquitoes’ mating ritual, where tens maybe even hundreds of thousands of mosquitoes swarm around one or more females trying to secure a spot close to her. And since male mosquitoes don’t sting, all you have to worry about is getting them off, as they can be very clingy.
Kamchatka is home to over 100 species of midges and mosquitoes, and so far entomologists haven’t determined which ones are most active this year, but they assume that there are both blood-sucking species and harmless midges in these giant tornadoes.
The mosquito tornadoes in Ust-Kamchatsk delight us this year. Look how elegantly they swarm. It’s like aliens, like in a horror movie!” one woman can be heard saying as she films the living columns rising over the Russian village.

Things aren’t much better in nearby villages like Klyuchi and Kozyrevsk, where some say mosquitoes are so aggressive they can sting through jeans and leather jackets.



https://www.odditycentral.com/news/russi...adoes.html
#2
(08-05-2020, 03:11 AM)727Sky Wrote: I hate Mosquitos 
Quote:Villages on the east coast of the Kamchatka peninsula, in the Russian Far-East are experiencing scenes that seem taken out of an Alfred Hitchkok movie. Only instead of birds invading their community, it’s billions of mosquitoes swirling into visible “tornadoes”.
Villages like Ust-Kamchatsk are used to being invaded by large number of mosquitoes every summer, it’s normal for this insects to swarm near bodies of water, but this year it’s much worse than usual. Because of an unusually hot summer, the number of mosquitoes is much larger, making them an even bigger nuisance than they usually are. Window and door nets do little to keep the pesky buzzers out of people’s homes, as they seem to get in through the smallest of cracks, and going outside means dealing with large swarms of mosquitoes that seem to reach the sky when seen from afar.

Photo: Komsomolskaya Pravda
“We have always had large numbers of mosquitoes here in the summer, and we always will, but there are just to many of them this year,” Ust-Kamchatsk resident Maria Zubkova said. “They get into every crack, even if there are nets on the windows, they still manage to get through.”
Videos of dozens of these mosquito tornadoes rising over villages on the east coast of Kamchatka have gone viral on Russian social media. They show these large whirlwinds visible from long distances, which wasn’t the case in past years. Locals are used to mosquitoes and midges invading their villages for a few months every years, but few can remember such large numbers.
 
Walking or driving through one of these living tornadoes will leave you covered in mosquitoes from head to toe, but experts say that people shouldn’t fear getting stung by them. The tornadoes are part of the mosquitoes’ mating ritual, where tens maybe even hundreds of thousands of mosquitoes swarm around one or more females trying to secure a spot close to her. And since male mosquitoes don’t sting, all you have to worry about is getting them off, as they can be very clingy.
Kamchatka is home to over 100 species of midges and mosquitoes, and so far entomologists haven’t determined which ones are most active this year, but they assume that there are both blood-sucking species and harmless midges in these giant tornadoes.
The mosquito tornadoes in Ust-Kamchatsk delight us this year. Look how elegantly they swarm. It’s like aliens, like in a horror movie!” one woman can be heard saying as she films the living columns rising over the Russian village.

Things aren’t much better in nearby villages like Klyuchi and Kozyrevsk, where some say mosquitoes are so aggressive they can sting through jeans and leather jackets.



https://www.odditycentral.com/news/russi...adoes.html

Thank you. I will never, ever, complain about the mosquitoes in Florida or Minnesota, ever, ever again!

For every one person that read this post. About 7.99 billion have not. 

Yet I still post.  tinyinlove
  • minusculebeercheers 


#3
Like a biblical plague almost.

They're really bad here this year too.
'Cause if they catch you in the back seat trying to pick her locks
They're gonna send you back to Mother in a cardboard box
You better run!
#4
(08-05-2020, 03:23 AM)NightskyeB4Dawn Wrote: Thank you. I will never, ever, complain about the mosquitoes in Florida or Minnesota, ever, ever again!

there is only one place in fl, my home that i ever complained about the mosquitoes. it was my permanent duty station while in the Corps.

take the picture tour. also scroll down on the home page and read how the guy found out about it. he's was pretty dead on a weapons move.

NAS Cecil Field Marine Barracks Yellow Water

any way there were some big ass skeeters there, small ones were as big quarters. and the real big ones use to pick up rabbits and carry them off and suck them dry lol. tinybiggrin. we use to joke that they were radiation fed sucking on the weapons and they glowed at night.
#5
@"727Sky" 

I caught one biting my hand the other day. I squished it as it was sucking me. I hate killing bugs but mosquitoes are the worst.

I also wonder if they spread Covid.
#6
Great thread.

When I moved here from up north about 7 years ago I was pretty used to Mosquitoes or so I thought.

After 2 years here I started getting ill and was eventually admitted for a short time.  Blood Tests revealed I was positive to "Barmah Forrest Virus"

At the time I was like, what the eff is that?  Well is appears to be a mossy borne  notifiable virus and is similar to "Ross River Virus"  Detected in the southern state of Victoria from a place called "Barmah Forrest" and is a recent sickness.  

Symptoms for me are, increased temp, aching joints, flushing of the skin and weariness.  A good long sleep alleviates most of those.  Hits me infrequently. And I feel the sun's heat so I tend to avoid it in summer.

That's why I hate those little suckers.

Kind regards,

Bally
#7
God no, I am pretty thankful for where I live when I see things like that!
I was born with a Thorn in my Soul, sometimes it hurts.


Nature gave us one tongue and two ears so we could hear twice as much as we speak.

- Epictetus






#8
Oh hell no! I thought the mosquitoes in Wisconsin were bad. That poor dude on the motorcycle! Yuck, so gross and nasty. I bet they’ll be glad when summer ends there. Holy crap.
[Image: attachment.php?aid=8180]
#9
2020 wasn't bad enough already?

Just checking the betting pool - who had mosquito-nados for August?

.
Diogenes was eating bread and lentils for supper. He was seen by the philosopher Aristippus, who lived comfortably by flattering the king.

Said Aristippus, ‘If you would learn to be subservient to the king you would not have to live on lentils.’ Said Diogenes, ‘Learn to live on lentils and you will not have to be subservient to the king.’


#10
I was out raking crabs a long time ago and wasn't watching the sun getting low in the sky . Lots of mangroves where i was and the biggest damn mosquitos you have ever seen . Anyway the sun hits the horizon and out they come all aiming for me .Well the problem is it 200 metres to the car and i would be sucked dry by then . Did i mention they were huge . Well i spot a 44 gallon drum about 30 metres away and bolt for that jump in and pull the lid back then i heard a dink like sound . Bloody things were flying right at the drum and puncturing it with their proboscis . Then problem was this didnt leave much room so i started bending them over with a rock that was conveniently inside . This went on all night and eventually i felt the heat of the suns a saw the light coming through the now thousand of holes so i venture a look outside . Well stuff me i was 5 kilometers away from where i jumped i the drum .

True story dat .
#11
(08-06-2020, 06:26 AM)hutch622 Wrote: I was out raking crabs a long time ago and wasn't watching the sun getting low in the sky . Lots of mangroves where i was and the biggest damn mosquitos you have ever seen . Anyway the sun hits the horizon and out they come all aiming for me .Well the problem is it 200 metres to the car and i would be sucked dry by then . Did i mention they were huge . Well i spot a 44 gallon drum about 30 metres away and bolt for that jump in and pull the lid back then i heard a dink like sound . Bloody things were flying right at the drum and puncturing it with their proboscis . Then problem was this didnt leave much room so i started bending them over with a rock that was conveniently inside . This went on all night and eventually i felt the heat of the suns a saw the light coming through the now thousand of holes so i venture a look outside . Well stuff me i was 5 kilometers away from where i jumped i the drum .

True story dat .

About this big, huh.
[Image: giant_mosquito_car_attack.gif]
Once A Rogue, Always A Rogue!
[Image: attachment.php?aid=936]
#12
(08-06-2020, 07:35 AM)guohua Wrote:
(08-06-2020, 06:26 AM)hutch622 Wrote: I was out raking crabs a long time ago and wasn't watching the sun getting low in the sky . Lots of mangroves where i was and the biggest damn mosquitos you have ever seen . Anyway the sun hits the horizon and out they come all aiming for me .Well the problem is it 200 metres to the car and i would be sucked dry by then . Did i mention they were huge . Well i spot a 44 gallon drum about 30 metres away and bolt for that jump in and pull the lid back then i heard a dink like sound . Bloody things were flying right at the drum and puncturing it with their proboscis . Then problem was this didnt leave much room so i started bending them over with a rock that was conveniently inside . This went on all night and eventually i felt the heat of the suns a saw the light coming through the now thousand of holes so i venture a look outside . Well stuff me i was 5 kilometers away from where i jumped i the drum .

True story dat .

About this big, huh.
[Image: giant_mosquito_car_attack.gif]

Yep.
#13
I get an allergic reaction to mosquitos. The bites swell up in odd shapes and very large. We had a game though. If a mosquito was biting tighten your muscles. They can't release so they suck your blood until they explode...

Just came across with a mosquito with a 2 inch wingspan. I hold no regrets.


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