- Bird baths - simply flushing them out with a garden hose will flush out the mosquito larvae. Plus, the birds will appreciate the fresh water. For horse owners with water troughs near stalls or out in pastures, one option is to use a product such as "Mosquito Dunks," which contain the bacteria Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis, which kills the mosquito larvae (but not the adults). Although you can use them in outdoor water bowls for pets, it is far simpler (and better for your animals) if you “tip and toss” the water from the bowl and replenish it with fresh water *daily*.
- Old cans, tires, etc. - empty them and get rid of them (legally dispose of them, don't simply toss them along the highway to become someone else’s problem).
- Outdoor flower pots - empty the water from the dishes/trays underneath them. Your plants have plenty of water without the overflow. This also helps reduce fungus gnat problems in the plant soil.
- Remove all of that built-up debris from your gutters. The water and decaying material attract mosquitoes.
- Rain barrels – if you collect water from your gutters or some other system, make sure the barrel is screened to keep out debris and mosquitoes.
- Tarps that cover your boat, grill, firewood, etc. also collect pockets of water that can remain for 1-2 weeks. So make sure you check those frequently and dump out any water that has collected on them.
- The bed of that '57 Ford pickup that you've been “restoring” for the last 25 years can collect water particularly if the tailgate faces uphill in your yard.
- Kids' pools - if they're not being used by kids, they're probably being used by the mosquitoes (and maybe some toads) - so empty them. The same thing applies to pools (in ground or above ground) that aren't maintained (e.g., pools on abandoned or foreclosed properties).
- Drainage ditches - they're meant to collect storm water temporarily. Keep them free of debris so that water flows and has time to filter into the soil.
- Decorative fish ponds can be a source of mosquitoes if they contain a lot of vegetation that provides hiding places for the mosquito larvae. “Mosquito Dunks” are an option here.
- Tree holes - when limbs fall off trees, the remaining hole in the trunk can collect water. Flush that out or put a small piece of a mosquito dunk into it.
One other point to remember - mosquitoes have no concept of property lines. Mosquito management takes a neighborhood effort to be truly effective. We have information on mosquito control on the web at http://insects.ncsu.edu/Urban/mosquito.htm.