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Best of New England Natural Solutions to Nature’s Nuisances: Flea Bite, Tick Bite, Bee Sting, Wasp Sting, Poison Oak & Poison Ivy Home Remedies.” button_text=’Get My FREE Guide!’ below_button=” photo=’1′ style=” ]
Best of New England Natural Solutions to Nature’s Nuisances: Flea Bite, Tick Bite, Bee Sting, Wasp Sting, Poison Oak & Poison Ivy Home Remedies
Do-it-yourself pest control: It’s a New England thing in this FREE guide from Yankee Magazine
Dear Friend,
“Ouch!”
Ah, the sounds of New England living!
Fortunately, there are ways to prevent and heal the bites, stings and allergic reactions to life in New England. Unfortunately, many of them contain unpleasant chemicals that can harm you or the envirnoment.
That’s why we’ve written this FREE guide, Best of New England Natural Solutions to Nature’s Nuisances: Flea Bite, Tick Bite, Bee Sting, Wasp Sting, Poison Oak & Poison Ivy Home Remedies that lets you protect your family from these nuisances – including the ones that fly, the ones that spring from the ground and even some of those on four legs.
Download this FREE guide now, and start enjoying the great outdoors – and indoors – naturally!
Natural solutions for bites, stings and more
This guide is extensive – because the bites, stings and itchies come from a vast range of nature’s nuisances! Are you one of those unlucky people who always seems to be getting stung by bees or wasps? This guide helps you figure out why (it might be your perfume, or the clothes you wear!) and offers several home remedies if you still get stung: ice, ammonia and … mud. (Yes, I said mud – a tried and true remedy from the very old days!)
In fact, the guide covers everything from tick protection (for you, your pets and even your landscape), bees and wasps, fleas, poison ivy and oak, to rodents, skunks, ants and silverfish. You get home remedies and preventatives, ideas for companion plantings to eliminate garden pests, even tips for weeding to help you avoid poison ivy problems.
In fact, Best of New England Natural Solutions to Nature’s Nuisances will help you …
- Learn how to avoid common problems, keep pests out of your home and even make your pets happier outdoors
- Choose the right remedy for the problem
- Preserve the environment by being green with our natural solutions
- Enjoy the natural world more than ever without fear of annoying insects and animals
- Prevent the diseases that insects and other nuisances can carry, without inviting other health problems
- Protect your family, pets and home from both natural pests and potentially toxic manufactured remedies!
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It seems as if there’s another news story every day about ingredients in some garden product or insect repellant that have been discovered to be harmful to your health. Cancer, neurological problems, even something as simple as skin irritation can be a reason why you think twice before buying those expensive, chemical-laden repellants and weed killers.
Not only can these things be harmful to you and your pets, many of them find their way into our water supply, or harm wildlife that’s crucial to environmental stability. In New England, we want to heal beestings, not kill our plant-pollinating honeybees.
No wonder savvy New Englanders are looking for new ways to protect themselves by turning to the past!
Then again, some of the remedies we deliver in this guide are actually recent discoveries that Grandma never would have imagined.
Natural solutions from the 19th and 21st centuries
Got poison ivy growing on your property? Instead of using chemicals to kill it, cover all the leaves and stems with black polyethylene, held down with stakes or a layer of wood chips or mulch. Lack of sunlight will kill the plants over time, without the need to use harsh herbicides that can harm your pets or children.
And here’s an idea that would have had Grandma blushing: Use pantyhose to protect squash, melons, pumpkins, and zucchini from vine borers. Get the details by downloading this free guide right now!
Here’s another thoroughly modern idea, this one for preventing voles and other rodents from nibbling your garden: Build a raised bed with wire mesh underneath it. Heck, you could grow onions and garlic, then use them to repel chipmunks and squirrels, too!
These ideas and many more are why you’ll want to read this guide. You won’t want to go another day without knowing …
- How to build a silverfish trap
- What other household products you can use besides tomato juice to de-skunk your dog
- Which plants can actually repel garden pests
- What to feed your dog to make him less appealing to ticks
- Which sweetener will repel ants as well as more toxic substances that are often recommended
- The additional virtues of catnip besides entertaining your feline friends
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Only Yankee could deliver so many natural solutions to natural problems
You may be wondering how reliable this guide is. The answer is simple: It comes from Yankee Magazine, the folks who’ve been writing about New England since 1935. If anyone has a stash of tried-and-true, old-time pest remedies, it’s us! After all, we get stung, bitten and poisoned like anyone else, and being New Englanders, we don’t want to spend a fortune on remedies, so we’re always the first ones to try natural solutions, whether they’re old or new, and pass them on.
Oh, and of course, being frugal Yankees, we also don’t want anyone to have to pay a lot for this useful guide. That’s why the cost is a whole $0. That leaves you a bit more in your wallet to buy ammonia, black polyethylene … or pantyhose.
You may never have to resort to harsh chemicals again.
Imagine living life without …
DEET – nasty for the eyes and said to be dangerous to the neurological system
Malathion – Poisonous if swallowed or absorbed through the skin after long exposure
Roundup® – Linked in some studies to lymphoma
Sulfur – the world’s oldest pesticide, which is actually organic but also causes eye and skin irritation
These are just the more common substances that have worried humans for some time now. Imagine all the other chemicals with unpronounceable names you’ve been using inside and outside your home, on your family, and on your pets! Wouldn’t the more benign pest solutions in our guide make you feel more comfortable in the ongoing natural nuisance battle?
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I certainly urge you to read our free guide today. You never know which pests you’ll have to battle tomorrow, and you’re far more likely to have cinnamon and lemons stocked at home than chemical insecticides, pesticides, repellants or first aid products. With this guide in hand, you’re almost always prepared for any natural nuisance.
You can plant your tulip bulbs with garlic to keep rodents away.
Fight poison ivy with an alcohol bath.
Mix confectioner’s sugar and borax to make an insect trap.
Slap an ice cube on a bee sting.
None of our natural solutions to nature’s nuisances are expensive, hard to find or tricky to use. Mother Nature gives us lemons … and we make an effective skin tonic to repel fleas!
You’ll be glad you took a few minutes to download and read our guide. It’s informative, eye-opening and even fun (because we’re Yankee … we always communicate with you like you’re old friends)!
Download it today –
Yours for a pest-free world,
Aimee Seavey
Digital Editor, New England Today
PS: Did you know that our beloved, shade-loving pachysandra – that impossible-to-kill landscape problem-solver – is actually a tick magnet? Find out what other plants are beloved by these pests in this FREE guide!
PPS: Did I mention that this guide to natural solutions for nature’s pests is absolutely FREE? You can’t get a better deal than that!
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Here in Michigan we have a weed called “broadleaf plantain” that take care of a bee sting in a matter of minutes. Just crush the leaves and put the juice on the sting. I’m sure it grows in the New England area.