Alaska
is famous for animals big and small, and perhaps the most noteworthy
large and tiny are moose and mosquitoes. June is the time we see a
lot of both here at the cabin. We kill swarms of the latter but enjoy
watching the former. Here follow some anecdotes about them this
year. This article is about mosquitoes; the prior one is about
our neighboring moose.
Mosquitoes
in Alaska are something of a marvel to me. How can something with no
exoskeleton survive winters at 30 below zero? REI offers nothing
that competes with the winter resilience of these survivors.
This
spring, our lake didn't even thaw until May 30. (We kayaked through
ice floes that day, feeling like Ernest Shackleton). Still, the
newest generation of mosquitoes emerged, en masse, like something out
of the Book of Revelations, only two weeks later, and were the worst
I had experienced in the past five summers. They were fast and
aggressive, biting me through my gardening gloves and pants and hair,
flying freely into and within the cabin, and even penetrating the
mosquito netting under which we sleep. My husband slept wearing a
head net, a cap, long sleeved T shirt and pants – under the full
bed mosquito net. I awoke with welts on my scalp under my hair.
Bed under mosquito netting; lights powered by solar/wind |
We had
Florida guests for a weekend during this period and the husband, by
his own admission, emerged from the guest cabin looking like the
“Elephant Man” - he was so swollen from insect bites (although he
admitted that he didn't appreciate why we had a mosquito net over the
bed (“in Alaska?”)