Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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We live on a pond. Love it. We love watching the bird life - the pelicans this winter entertained us for hours. We have fun guessing the social life of the ducks. The water sparkles in the afternoon. Never had a smell in over 5 years. We had one alligator for about 6 months. There are times when the frogs are noisy - thankfully not lately. There are a few times when we have the very tiny insects - I call them gnats. Not sure what they are but usually they are here for less than two weeks a couple times a year. The Villages maintenance folks occasionally put a boat in - not sure what they are doing. We've not had problems with algae.
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Columbus OH, The Villages - Amelia |
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#17
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Pond Life Animal Printouts - EnchantedLearning.com Click on hyperlink and keep scrolling down for "possible" pond inhabitants. Not necessarily yours. |
#18
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No, they don't bite and they don't really bother us as we work around the house. They just infest the house. They're like little gnats or noseeums. I find them on the windowsill inside our enclosed lanai. All the doors and windows are plastered with them. They land on the house and die there so you have to constantly sweep their dead bodies off the house. The more humid the worse they are. They make a mess.
I don't understand how those who live on these ponds can say they don't have these while we do. I wonder why that is. We do have a large pond and are fairly close to the pond so not sure if that's why or not. The pond is beautiful especially in the winter when we don't have the nuisance of these bugs. We have no issue with smell either. |
#19
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Jhrc4 ... I don't think you should be afraid of all ponds. It would be such a shame to miss out on the joys of backing on water. Perhaps when you find a home you like, talk to the neighbors and see what they report.
We have no smells at all from our two retention ponds, whether they have a lot of water or just a bit. And we absolutely love our view, as do our neighbors.
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Barefoot At Last No act of kindness, no matter how small, is ever wasted. Saving one dog will not change the world, but surely for that one dog, the world will change forever. |
#20
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#21
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Mosquitoes swarm Lake County homes | News 13 |
#22
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#23
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Above ground water has very little to do with sinkholes. They are a function of the geological structure underground, and the erosion of that structure by groundwater.
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........American by birth....Union by choice |
#24
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#25
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p.s. I just read that they are attracted to light. If you can, keep the outdoor lights off.
When we first moved into our present home in Vermont, we had nothing but woods across the street. It was a cul de sac with only four homes on it. We looked across at trees, wildflowers and mountain views......... We had an electric bug zapper from our other house (in the same neighborhood) which we kept by the pool out back........so we plugged it in on our front porch in this new home. We were hearing the "zapping" of the dead electrocuted bugs constantly......... We finally realized that we were drawing all of the bugs in the forest across the way; species we had never ever seen before............ Once we unplugged the bug zapper, no more bugs. Strange but true. Where we are in Vermont does not have mosquitos but some parts have black flies in the springtime......we always have had hornets, wasps and bees. Always something. |
#26
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gators
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#27
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Meaning in the ponds?
Do they come out and sun themselves close to the house? I was thinking more like poisonous snakes and rats. You know, living in Vermont, we are not wimps....however....we have had our own rodent infestation which lasted for years......with hubby doing the have a heart trap routine daily........groundhogs/woodchucks are A LOT BIGGER than any Florida rat species. These were ornery critters who had an entire apartment complex burrowed under our patio shrubs on a hillside. They would come out and sun themselves right in view of my kitchen atrium doors. I worried when our first set of grandbabies would visit and want to crawl around on the grass..... We finally had backhoes, bulldozer, cat's, etc. excavate and removed all the huge old shrubs and tree stumps, etc......destroying their habitat.....replaced the patio with a trex deck across back of house. Haven't seen any in several years now. Between you and I, I think that by "feeding them inside the trap" we actually lured all the ones in the neighborhood down to our yard.....not just the ones who lived underground by our house..........they loved apples, tomatoes, peanut butter and when nothing else was available they also ate chocolate chip cookies........they were not fussy. My husband was aware that they could have rabies.......so he would use a long stick and had a string on the cage just in case he caught a skunk.......every night after work he had to make the trip to the "edge of town" to leave them off in a forested area...........in other words, "relocation"......oh, he also covered the trunk of the car with protective material and put a towel over the cage..........as they would GROWL at him. Finally, after a few years of this, the siege was over. I just don't want to go through it again........ We even had cousins in New Jersey who told us that a "farmer had told him" that these groundhogs always find their way back.......he thought all of ours were the same one. But I had taken pictures of all them, daily, and they were all different colors, ages, sizes.....and orneriness. It was a huge family and all the neighbor groundhogs/woodchucks as well. |
#28
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Everywhere today are those little helicoptors; Dragonflys.
They don't hurt anything and are frequently found as symbols of pretty bugs. They are flying everywhere, not just near ponds. We are having a lot of rain the last couple of days, the dregs of the defunct Tropical Storm Karen. Very apt name for a storm. I have at least ten friends named Karen. They are very much not defunct.
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It is better to laugh than to cry. |
#29
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? ?? Sorry G, misread post. Not enough coffee.
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........American by birth....Union by choice Last edited by mulligan; 10-08-2013 at 09:36 AM. |
#30
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Mosquitos are another story. We were at Disney once and all the high end resorts "on the premises" had their pools shut down due to what they now call TRIPLE "E" which is Eastern Equine Encephalitis..........and can be very dangerous and even fatal in the elderly. That same trip, in September, Disney was covered in LOVE BUGS.....all over the paths.........everywhere. Every place has something. New England coastal residents and visitors have to be concerned with WEST NILE VIRUS among other things.........and LYME DISEASE......from ticks. |
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