The more I research about mosquitos and the "controls" for them, the more I find there isn't much I can do about them that doesn't cost alot or potentially harm other animals or beneficial insects. Then I got to thinking..."folks back in the "old days" probably didn't bother fighting the mosquito war...and they still had eggs back then. I wonder how many people nowadays bother with it?"
So, for all the folks who live in high-mosquito-population areas and you know that mosquitos are "drinking" your chickens at night: do you fight the fight, or do you just let it be?
I keep honeybees so I very rarely use pesticides. I live in the humid South so mosquitos in the Spring, Summer and Fall. However, I am not bothered too much by mosquitos.
Six things I do as natural remedies:
(1) I do not let water sit.
(2) In my pond, I have a lot of minnows - (they are self sustaining; I started with a few and they have bred and live in mass in my pond).
(3) If I must have sitting water, I have used those non-pesticide mosquito dunks.
(4) I also have three bat houses on my barns to attract the Big Brown Bat. I see a lot of bats. A single bat can eat its body weight in flying insects per night. The best is to get a maternal colony to take up in one in early Spring.
(5) In the Spring and Summer (and up to October), I put out hummingbird feeders. I have to fill them during peak months almost everyday. This year I used 4 of those quart-size feeders. I have about a hundred at any given time during the season. Hummingbirds, among other insects and spiders, eat mosquitos.
(6) I run fans over the roosts in the coops in the Summer.
This all seems to work for me. It may not work everywhere, but I don't see many mosquitos anymore (and we had a very rainy summer too).
There is a natural concoction I used when I lived in the city (it worked spraying the bushes around the house and coops. It is like a tbls of lemon ammonia and 1 tblsp liquid lemon dish detergent, -- both I find for $1 at the Dollar Store & there may be another ingredient . . . . in 1 gallon of water, spray about once per week. I have not had to use this where I live now. Does anyone else do these things?