How to take your garden and yard back from the mosquitoes Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

Life comes with lots of little annoyances, few of them littler or more annoying than mosquitoes. Just about everyone who spends any time outdoors will be bothered by the bloodsucking party poopers at one point or another.

Although it may seem difficult to avoid mosquitoes, there are several easy measures you can take to reduce or eliminate them from your yard and garden. The best control is prevention.

With the exception of those who live near a lake, marsh or swamp – or in densely packed neighbourhoods – most of the blame for mosquito invasions usually falls on the property’s residents.

Mosquitoes need only one-quarter inch of water to breed — and a female can lay hundreds of eggs at a time.

Inspect your property for standing water. Even the most diligent among us will likely find water collected in a children’s playset, tire, clogged gutter, pot saucer, overturned trash can lid or flying disc toy.

Drain or dump water as you see it, even if the amount appears insignificant, and drill drainage holes in the bottoms of vessels like tire swings.

For water that’s intended to stand, such as in ponds and bird baths, the bacterium Bacillus thuringiensis israelensis (Bti) is a safe and effective way to kill mosquito larvae.

Several strains of Bt are available, each targeting different insects, so be sure to buy the israelensis strain to target mosquitoes.

The product is also effective against black flies and fungus gnats.

Bti comes in various forms, including doughnut-shaped briquettes called “Mosquito Dunks.”

The floating rings offer 30 days of protection and “will not harm people, pets and other animals, aquatic life, or other insects, including honeybees,” according to the CDC.

If you don’t have a pond or bird bath, you can make a DIY mosquito trap: Add a handful of straw, hay or grass clippings to a (preferably dark-coloured) pail filled with water, and let it sit for 1-2 days.

Then add one mosquito dunk. For large infestations, tuck several buckets around the yard. The decomposing organic matter will attract the insects, which will lay eggs on the treated water.

Replace water and add a fresh dunk every 30 days to thwart future generations of mosquitoes.

Mosquitoes also like to hunker down among weeds and overgrown vegetation. Keep the yard tidy.

Running a standing or box fan at high speed will significantly reduce mosquito activity on your porch, deck or patio.

It works by literally blowing the insects away and dispersing our exhaled carbon dioxide, which would otherwise attract them. You’ll keep cooler, too.

Avoid using insecticidal foggers or sprays, which threaten essential pollinators and other beneficial insects while controlling only a small portion of the adult mosquito population.

In addition, such applications would need to be repeated multiple times per season.

So-called “mosquito plants” and other plants marketed as repellents do, indeed, contain oils or chemicals that the insects find unappealing.

But they’re not effective unless those compounds are released, such as by crushing the leaves. Merely having such a plant in the garden or a pot will not provide any benefit.

Various research studies have shown citronella candles containing lemongrass oil provide mild-to-moderate protection.

The jury is out on whether the benefit can be attributed to the repellent properties of the active ingredient, the candle’s ability to mask the human scent or if the flame itself is the deterrent.

In case you’re wondering, mosquitoes do serve a purpose — as pollinators and bird food.

Still, because the roles they serve in these areas are minor, eliminating them from your yard will not adversely affect the ecosystem.

Itchy welts aside, many of us live or vacation in areas where mosquitoes can transmit viruses like West Nile, Zika, dengue and chikungunya, and parasitic illnesses like malaria.

Pets are at risk, too, with heartworm disease posing the most significant threat.

Wearing long sleeves and pants, reducing time spent outdoors between dusk and dawn, when mosquitoes are most active, and keeping up to date with pets’ heartworm prevention treatments will go a long way toward reducing mosquito bites.

And remember, you don’t live in a barn. Keep the door closed.

By Jessica Damiano

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Early reports from BHTA show Crop Over staycation for locals a success Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

Interim CEO of the Barbados Hotel and Tourism Association (BHTA) Geoffrey Roach says that members are reporting a good response to the Crop Over Staycation special that was offered to Barbadians this year.

Though notified late in the opinions of some, it appears that some locals made good use of the discounted offer.

Chatting with Loop News after a press conference at Island Inn this week, Roach said the early reports are very positive.

“While all the members have not yet reported on the response that they had, those who have have certainly indicated that it was a good programme for them. Even though some of them would not have seen the bookings that they would have liked to see, what they have responded to say to us, is that they thought that the programme really helped to put the staycation programme back in front of the Barbadian public and that will only augur well for them going forward.”

And he said that members have even stepped up to say they are “ready and willing” to participate in another programme of this nature.

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‘2 boys one time, Oh God,’ says dad of J’cans who jumped off US bridge Loop Barbados

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Barbados News

The Bulgin family is still trying to come to terms with the devastating loss of two brothers, 26-year-old Tavaris and 21-year-old Tavaughn Bulgin, in a tragic drowning incident in the US two days ago.

“Two boys one time, Oh God,” the boys’ father, Reverend Keith Bulgin, who is also the pastor at the Palmers Cross New Testament Church of God, told Loop News on Wednesday.

“I do everything for them. They were my boys, and they were so helpful. Tavaughn played keyboard in our praise and worship in the church, and Tavaris (the older brother) was the Sunday School superintendent, he was like a technological genius; he did the structure for the whole church….everything,” Reverend Bulgin said.

The brothers were part of a group that jumped off the infamous ‘Jaws Bridge that connects Edgartown to Oak Bluffs around 11pm on Sunday. Tavaris’ body was retrieved soon after, while the search is still on for the younger brother, who is presumed dead.

Jaws Bridge is said to be a popular tourist attraction on the island, and many people jump from it during the summer, despite a sign warning people against it.

The brothers were from Clarendon, Jamaica, and were working at a restaurant on Martha’s Vineyard as part of the popular summer work-and-travel programme, which provides employment opportunities for hundreds of university-age students from Jamaica each year.

They have two sisters.

On Tuesday morning, divers and other police units resumed the search for Tavaughn’s body, focusing on the side of the bridge bordering the inlet and pond, a state police spokesman told the Boston Globe. Police deployed side-scanning sonar technology Tuesday, which allows searchers to map the seafloor.

After failing to find Tavaughn Bulgin’s body Tuesday morning, crews worked their way back over to the bridge’s ocean side. But poor weather caused dangerous conditions, the spokesman said, and Tuesday’s search was suspended at 1 pm.

Going forward, weather conditions will be assessed on a day-by-day basis to determine whether it is safe to resume the search, an article in the Boston Globe reported a few hours ago.

By Claude Mills

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Ne-Yo On Vybz Kartel & Spice “Romping Shop” Clearance: “The Streets Cleared It”

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Urban Islandz

Ne-Yo says that problems encountered by Vybz Kartel and Spice for the sample of his song “Miss Independent” on their biggest hit, “Romping Shop,” had nothing to do with him.

In an interview on Drink Champs, Ne-Yo says that he was not the one who refused to clear the song as he claims that he was not aware the song was sampled, and he didn’t have an issue with it anyways.

Thirteen years ago, Vybz Kartel and Spice dropped what is now one of the biggest songs in dancehall, “Romping Shop.” The song sampled “Miss Independent” but caused major controversy for all of the artists involved.

Miss Independent was a widely successful track for Ne-Yo as it became his first No. 1 hit on the Billboard Hot 100, topping the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart. The song spent almost a dozen weeks on various charts and is now a platinum-selling record.

However, after “Romping Shop” was released, Vybz Kartel received a cease-and-desist letter threatening legal action from EMI Music Publishing. A letter from EMI was widely publicized, signaling that the era of dancehall artists sampling hip hop and R&B tracks without permission was over due to the incorporation of technology.

The letter demanded that “Romping Shop” could not be released and that the artist was to destroy all of the recordings of the infringing track and that the song will be removed from all internet sites.

This led to Vybz Kartel changing the riddim on the song and re-releasing it as he did not seek permission to sample the track in the first place. More than a decade later, “Romping Shop” is as successful as “Miss Independent,” which has 424 million views on YouTube.

In his interview with Drink Champs, Ne-Yo says that he had nothing to do with the Jamaican artists being told to change the riddim on the track. The artist said he was ready to approve the clearance as he knew about Vybz Kartel’s popularity back then.

“I didn’t not clear it…the streets cleared it right away which made it virtually impossible to not clear it, even if I was thinking about not clearing it which by the way I was never thinking about not clearing it,” he said to N.O.R.E.

Ne-Yo added that before seeing the popularity of “Romping Shop” rise as it debuted on the Billboard Hot 100, he was told about Vybz Kartel, and the knowledge that he had sampled “Miss Independent” without permission had come by surprise to him.

“Before the song was presented to me, the concept of Vybz Kartel and who he was was presented to me. Like, this is ‘that dude’ oh, and by the way, he did this with your song. It was presented to me like that. So I’m like, so, what are we talking about right now? Of course, it’s fine. Why would I have a problem with this?” he told the hosts.

Ne-Yo added that “Romping Shop” inevitably helped to raise the profile of his own track.

“To this day, I can’t be over there and perform Miss Independent without giving props to what the f**k he did. You created a whole other vibe and that’s just off of the sh*t that I was tryna do. I gotta give you love for that,” he said.

The artist added that, in his opinion, sampling is essential to teach the younger generation to make better music or experience an era they could otherwise not grow up in.

“You gotta realise, it’s generations coming behind you …and if you decide to not let nobody f**k with what you did because it’s what you did and you gon’ have this pride about it, then them generations don’t get it. Them generations don’t get to experience it, they don’t get to enjoy it.”

“Romping Shop” is by far one of the most controversial and sexually explicit tracks by Vybz Kartel. The artist became known for his raunchy music, which also saw pushback from society concerning the lyrics of the music.

The song was banned by the Broadcasting Commission of Jamaica from radio and TV as it violated the rules for publishing music. This led to the artist creating a “clean” version of the song.

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Funeral of slain Moruga ex-lay minister, husband on Friday

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Trinidad and Tobago Newsday

News

File photo by Lincoln Holder

A joint funeral is set tentatively for Friday for slain 82-year-old Sylda Mudie and her husband, Carltus “Sankar” Mudie, 80, the man who ended her life.

Relatives said plans were still being finalised, but most likely, it would be at the St Vincent Ferrer RC church at Grand Chemin, Moruga.

Sylda Mudie, the mother of two and grandmother of one of Basse Terre Village was a former lay minister in the St Vincent Ferrer parish.

Mudie’s husband, a gardener, shot and chopped her at the family’s home at Edward Trace on August 10. She died in the house.

He also chopped and wounded their son Derek Mudie, 55. Derek lives abroad and is visiting from the US.

When the police went to the house, Carltus Mudie was still holding his licensed gun.

There was a confrontation, and the police shot Mudie, who refused to drop the gun. He was taken to hospital, where he died the next day.

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“Tatito” Hernández dice no dará paso a más APP’s si no atiende tres medidas relacionadas al asunto energético

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El presidente de la Cámara de Representantes, Rafael “Tatito” Hernández Montañez le dio un ultimátum el miércoles al gobernador Pedro Rafael Pierluisi Urrutia en la que no darán paso a más alianzas público privadas a cambio de que se atiendan tres medidas relacionas al asunto energético.

“Quiero que estemos claros. Gobernador no cuenta con el voto de la Cámara de Representantes para la próxima alianza público privada sobre el tema energético si no nos sentamos primero y se atienden estos tres puntos”, dijo Hernández Montañez en conferencia de prensa.

“Le enviamos una carta al gobernador donde le estamos solicitando respetuosamente que nos sentemos a dialogar. Gobernador, tenemos que sentarnos a dialogar, vamos a buscar alternativas”, añadió.

Mencionó como uno de esos tres puntos, que se radicó una versión “más sencilla” del Proyecto de la Cámara 1383 vetada por Pierluisi Urrutia, con miras a establecer un diálogo para lograr su firma. El segundo punto, es la radicación de una medida que atienda la falta de transparencia para futuras concesiones de APP’s. El tercer punto, es la generación de energía eléctrica.

“Es bien difícil señor gobernador, le voy a ser bien sincero, que nosotros podamos avalar una transacción de alianza publico privada de generación de energía sin que usted no mejora la gravedad del tema de LUMA. Si no nos sentamos a reestructurar la deuda de Puerto Rico, nos sentamos a reestructurarla nosotros. No la Junta (de Control Fiscal), nosotros con legislación. Y sin la falta de transparencia, una política pública certera que evite que LUMA se repita”, dijo el presidente cameral.

Asimismo, le solicitó a Pierluisi Urrutia que “no extienda el contrato interino de LUMA que se vence el próximo 30 de noviembre y que haga público la certificación de cumplimiento que eran requeridas para comenzar el contrato desde el principio. O sea, nosotros queremos ver cómo se otorgó. Lo que queremos es tráiganos la certificación y por favor, no extienda el contrato en noviembre”, señaló.

Los pronunciamientos del presidente cameralse dieron en una conferencia de prensa en la que expresó cuáles serán sus prioridades en el inicio de la Cuarta Sesión Ordinaria en la Asamblea Legislativa.

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Un niña de 11 años con desnutrición muere tras descompensarse en una escuela en Argentina

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

Una niña de 11 años, que atravesaba una situación de extrema vulnerabilidad y padecía problemas de desnutrición, murió en Argentina tras descompensarse en la escuela a la que asistía en el barrio de Barracas, Comuna 4 de la Ciudad Autónoma de Buenos Aires.

La menor vivía en la villa 21-24, un asentamiento precario de la capital argentina, y estudiaba en la Escuela N° 11 D.E. 5 República de Haití, desde 2017.

El pasado viernes 12 de agosto, la niña sufrió una descompensación en el centro educativo. “No perdía el conocimiento, pero no podía estar parada, temblaba“, contó la docente Ailén Galante, según cita Diario con Vos.

Los docentes llamaron al Sistema de Atención Médica de Emergencias (SAME), el servicio público y gratuito de atención de emergencias de Buenos Aires, para que la atendiesen; sin embargo, luego de una hora de espera y una nueva llamada, el auxilio no llegó.

Su familia la retiró del colegio y el lunes 15 de agosto fue ingresada al Hospital Penna, uno de los principales hospitales públicos de Buenos Aires, donde falleció. Se esperan los resultados de la autopsia para determinar las causas exactas de la muerte.

Responsabilizan a las autoridades porteñas

El personal del centro educativo responsabiliza de la muerte de esta niña al Gobierno de la Ciudad de Buenos Aires.

“Creemos que esto se podría haber evitado porque nosotros tomamos todas las acciones necesarias para que esto no sucediera. Estamos seguros que esto fue culpa de un Estado ausente que tiene la decisión política de no ocuparse de nuestros pibes”, dijo Galante a Página 12.

La docente explicó que la menor comenzó el primer grado en la escuela en 2017. Para entonces, los docentes conocían la situación de vulnerabilidad de su familia debido a que varios de sus hermanos habían sido alumnos en el colegio.

De acuerdo con un comunicado de los docentes, publicado por La Izquierda Diario, “ya en los primeros días de su ingreso a la escuela, se pidió la intervención del EOE (Equipo de Orientación Escolar) debido a la clara vulnerabilidad de derechos que atravesaba la niña y su familia”.

Cuentan que en 2018 y 2019 se presentó un certificado médico que indicaba la necesidad de “un refuerzo hipercalórico de vianda”, pero este, que era insuficiente, “no se le otorgó el año pasado”.

“Fueron 6 años los que transitó en nuestra escuela. Seis años en los que el Estado estuvo ausente, en los que solo se obstaculizaron los intentos por intervenir frente a tanta vulnerabilidad e injusticia”, denunciaron los decentes.

Foto: Imagen ilustrativaEllyy / Shutterstock

Nota original de RT Español.

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Colegio de Químicos de Puerto Rico otorga su más alto galardón a Claribel Matínez Marmolejos

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Radio Isla TV

El Colegio de Químicos de Puerto Rico (CQPR) reconoció el miércoles, a la licenciada Claribel Martínez Marmolejos con su más alto galardón, el premio Dr. Osvaldo Ramírez Torres para destacar su aportación y trayectoria profesional en el campo de la ciencia.

“Nos alegra de sobremanera poder reconocer la labor encomiable de miembros como Claribel en la profesión de la química. Sin duda este galardón es un reconocimiento por su dedicación, constancia y esfuerzo continuo. ¡Enhorabuena!”, expresó el licenciado Olvin Ortiz Calderón, presidente del CQPR en declaraciones escritas.

El premio es concedido a colegiados del CQPR que han realizado contribuciones significativas a ciencia; ya sea a través de investigaciones, manejo de proyectos y academia. La galardonada también fue pasada presidenta del CQPR y se ha sido miembro de varios comités de la histórica institución.

Por su parte, la licenciada Claribel Martínez Marmolejos expresó que, “es un gran privilegio recibir la distinción del premio Dr. Osvaldo Ramírez Torres en reconocimiento a mis aportes y trayectoria en las ciencias químicas”.

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Conductor shot on HWT Road, culprits lead cops on chase Loop Jamaica

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Jamaica News Loop News

A 26-year-old bus conductor was shot and injured sometime after 11 Wednesday morning at a section of Half-Way-Tree Road in St Andrew, impacting traffic flow on the main thoroughfare for several hours.

The condition of the bus conductor is not known at this time.

The police told Loop News that the conductor was on a bus travelling along Half-Way-Tree Road when on getting to the vicinity of National Baking Company, a Probox motor car with occupants aboard approached the bus. The occupants opened fire hitting the conductor.

The police arrived on the scene quickly enough to pursue the Probox. The driver of the vehicle took the police on a chase through several communities in the Maxfield Park Avenue area, where the driver was forced to stop on Ransford Avenue.

The occupants fled the vehicle and escaped on foot.

The Probox was seized by the police for forensic examination and collection of other evidence to successfully conclude the investigation.

A motive has not yet been established for the shooting.

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GraceKennedy not impacted by Capri-Sun recall in U.S. market

Black Immigrant Daily News

The content originally appeared on: Antigua News Room

It has been reported in the media that Kraft-Heinz, the Capri-Sun licensing partner in the US, has issued a voluntary recall of approximately 5,760 cases of Capri-Sun Wild Cherry Flavored Juice Drink products. CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHATSAPP GROUP FOR NEWS UPDATES.

This is happening in the US only and there is no risk of a serious health issue. Capri-Sun is distributed in Jamaica by GraceKennedy (GK) Foods through its World Brands Services (WBS) division, and in the Caribbean through its subsidiary Grace Foods Latin America and the Caribbean (LACA).

Capri-Sun products distributed through WBS and Grace Foods LACA are manufactured in Jamaica by GK Foods, and are not impacted by the US recall in any way.

At Capri-Sun, we’re committed, as always to a high standard of quality, as the safety of our consumers is paramount.

If anyone does have concerns over their product, we encourage them to contact the relevant customer support line which can be found on the back of their Capri-Sun products.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHATSAPP GROUP FOR NEWS UPDATES.

CLICK HERE TO JOIN OUR WHATSAPP GROUP

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