CURRENT | CANADA | WORLD | ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

BUISNESS | LIFESTYLE | SCIENCE | ARCHIVE

Green Avengers: Plants Take on Mosquitoes, Smell Nice Doing It

, , ,

In a bold counteroffensive against summer’s most loathed airborne tyrants, a ragtag group of leafy mercenaries is emerging as our unlikely saviors. From windowsills to backyard battlefields, mosquito-repelling plants are gaining traction—not just for their botanical charm, but for their ability to wage olfactory war against bloodsuckers.

Citronella, often mistaken for a lawn-scented candle, is actually a grass with a lemony vendetta. Lavender, meanwhile, isn’t just for calming tea and your grandmother’s closet—it’s a purple-clad assassin that mosquitoes hate more than you hate them. Basil, the pesto hero, pulls double duty: culinary delight by day, winged death deterrent by dusk.

“The mosquitoes don’t stand a chance,” said Donna Hartford, a local gardener who’s converted her flower beds into what she calls “The No-Fly Zone.” Donna hasn’t seen a mosquito in days, though she admits it could be due to the unsettling number of neighborhood cats sleeping in her lemongrass.

Of course, experts warn that these plants are more deterrent than force field. “If you’re expecting basil to save you during a swamp-side barbecue, good luck,” says entomologist Dr. Ray Thorn. “But hey, at least your corpse will smell nice.”

As climate change fuels the mosquito uprising, these photosynthetic soldiers offer a small, fragrant resistance. So plant your defenses and pray for rain—because nothing says “summer” quite like the sweet scent of rosemary… and the faint whine of death.



©2025 Project Mayhem, Inc.
All trademarks referenced herein are the properties of their respective owners.