Using Essential Oil Insect Repellent

By Barbara Moore


Summertime is a wonderful time to be outdoors, but bugs can make your life miserable. Using bug spray is almost essential, but who wants dubious chemicals in the air you're breathing or on your skin? Fortunately, essential oil insect repellent sprays work wonderfully well. There are many on the market, or you can easily make your own.

Conventional personal bug sprays often contain chemicals like DEET, which is known to be dangerous. Even adults have become ill or died from exposure to this chemical, and it is considered unsafe for children by many authorities. It's approved for family use by government watchdogs, however, so many people use sprays that contain it. Often, they don't know the danger, or they just might not think they have an alternative.

Essential oils are extracted from herbs. There are many familiar ones that keep biting and stinging insects away. Prepared formulas come in sprays, topical solutions, rub-on sticks, and pre-soaked wipes. These work well for garden use, for when you're at the beach, or even for camping in the deep woods. People use them for pets and horses, and to keep spiders out of the house.

You can also make your own with essential oils (volatile oils naturally found in plants that are isolated by one of a number of extraction methods) and some simple carrier solutions. Although some hard-to-collect oils might be expensive, there are many that you can buy that are affordable. There are several diluting solutions you can use, including water, witch hazel, rubbing alcohol, and apple cider vinegar.

Go online for recipes for bug spray. You will see they vary greatly in the herbals used and the amount of oil added. There are many formulas. Almost all include one or more of the mints, and some even tell you how to use dried herbs. Dried herbs still have volatile oils; boiling them in water releases the oils and the fragrance.

Popular herbs to use in personal bug sprays include peppermint, citronella, lavender (even though this smells wonderful to us, bugs don't like it), lemon balm, cedar, rosemary, and lemongrass. A spray of water, witch hazel, and several of these aromatic herbs smells so nice that it's a pleasure to use. In dilution, these oils are safe to spray on skin, and you don't even have to hold your breath. If you like, you can add clove or vanilla for added aroma.

It might be a good idea to spray your hat rather than your face to keep gnats off, to spray your trousers when walking in brush to repel ticks, and to spray children's clothing rather than putting it directly on skin. Most people, however, find that the recommended mixes are non-irritating when applied directly, like to your ankles when sitting outdoors in the evening. People often rub the fresh herb on themselves in a pinch, using a few leaves of lemon balm or catnip to keep pesky gnats away when they want to pull a few weeds on an early morning walk in the garden.

Once you use a natural repellent, whether one you buy or one you make yourself, you will never want to go back to chemicals. People even use them for pets, to keep fleas, ticks, flies, and mosquitoes away. An all-natural bug spray will make summertime better than ever.




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