Pest Control & Home Cleaning Before Diwali
Diwali is round the corner. We have often seen people getting Pest Control & Home Cleaning before every Diwali. We sometimes wonder why?
In India People visit each other’s homes during this festive season. No one would prefer to go to a neighbour’s house full of spiders or a house filled with bed bugs. There is nothing scarier than getting into the rest room that has a cockroach or a lizard staring at you. Imagine you are sitting on a sofa at your friend’s house and you have a feeling that a mouse has just crossed over your foot and is hiding right beneath the sofa. You can’t even sip the tea peacefully and interact normally. Pest Control Or imagine when you are walking through you hear a creaky sound from the wooden floor which had been half chewed by the termites. But still we haven’t found strong logic why always before Diwali and not other festivals.
Diwali is celebrated shortly after the monsoon ends. With all the cool weather and happiness that monsoon brings along, there comes loads of germs, insects and diseases as well. Also during Diwali, there are large scale preparations of delicacies and that invites lots of pests. While we enjoy it as “Festival” the pests equally enjoy it as their “Pestival”. So in fact all those health risks that are brought by monsoon are neutralized with our age old traditions of thorough Pest Control & cleaning of homes.
Often people get surprised when i say pest control along with cleaning has been the tradition since ancient times. They ask – “Are you serious”? Cleaning I understand but how on the earth they got pest control services in olden times? It’s an amazing fact that every Hindu tradition has valid scientific & logical reason behind it.
Well! The ancient Indian practice of applying a thin paste made of cowdung, Gangajal, clay and cow urine, served as a disinfectant, and “Environment Friendly Pesticide”. This was a very scientific way of pest control because the cow dung has bacteriophage a virus that infects and replicates within a bacterium. FAO and many other reputed global institutions have recognized the ancient Indian practice. Search on Google and Wikipedia and you will find ample proof.