Looks a bit like a big mosquito.

The movement and ecology of “mosquitoes” seem to differ according to region and country.

I was born in Hiroshima and went to Tokyo after graduating from university. I remember thinking, ‘Tokyo’s mosquitoes are so bad…’ I remember thinking, ‘Tokyo’s mosquitoes are so bad…’. Hiroshima is slow. It’s hard to live in Tokyo.

And now I live in Portugal.
As summer approaches, something’s flying… I notice that I’m getting leg bites!

They’re different from Japanese mosquitoes, they feel red and itchy differently.
I’m itchy, but if I’m patient, the Japanese mosquito bites seem to go away after an hour.

But this is the first time I’ve been bitten by a mosquito in Portugal, and it gets very red, itchy and doesn’t go away.
And they’re a bit big, and most importantly, I don’t know when I got bitten 😂
So I decided to Kill.

I bought some mosquito coils at Pingo Doce (a Portuguese supermarket) that are like Kill mosquito coils.

This one.

Translated with DeepL.com (free version)

I don’t forgive the person who stabbed me! I use this for all the mosquitoes.
I haven’t seen any mosquitoes since I started using this.

I used to lose sleep worrying about them flying around at night, but this has solved the problem!

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kenichiのアバター kenichi エンジニア・写真家 | Engineer and photographer

Nomadic worker who travels all over Japan and abroad; worked as a technical sales person for five years before going independent.
Works as a freelance engineer on website production and application development. Currently working to bring interesting things by interesting people to the world, while seeking to move abroad.

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