Last updated: 5 Jun 2026 | 102 Views |
Karn, a former office worker who traded his salary for a mountain-view campground in Suan Phueng, Ratchaburi, thought the toughest part of the camping business would be the slow rainy season. What hurt more was a single review on a famous camping page — "The view here is worth a million. The mosquitoes number a hundred thousand. Ten minutes of stargazing and you flee into your tent." Three thousand shares. Next month's bookings: nearly zero.
Karn's site has 40 tent pitches, 8 glamping units, a small stream running behind the property, and open woodland all around. Customers pay for exactly one thing: sitting in front of their tent, grilling, stargazing, listening to nature.
In the rainy season the stream slows, water pools in rock hollows and tree cavities, and the old tyres edging the flower beds collect rain. Garden Aedes and Culex mosquitoes begin feeding at twilight — exactly when campers light their grills. Children went to bed coated in calamine. Some families packed up before midnight and asked for refunds on the spot.
The viral review wasn't a lie, and Karn knew it — he was bitten every night himself.
What a camping business needs isn't another repellent gadget. It's site management that understands nature — suppressing mosquitoes to a level where stargazing is genuinely possible, without damaging the atmosphere and ecosystem that are the site's selling points.
A nearby resort owner already using the service introduced Karn to the mosquito spray service from World Health Disinfection (WHD). The team drove from Bangkok to Suan Phueng and walked the entire site from afternoon to dusk, mapping exactly where mosquitoes emerged and when.
The plan: ULV treatment every Thursday morning ahead of the weekend guests, focusing on the woodland edge, stream banks, rock hollows, and natural water pockets — with a science-based buffer zone along the stream to protect aquatic life. The team also pointed out man-made larval havens nobody had noticed: the flower-bed tyres and the rain barrels, now emptied on a weekly checklist.
"I turned the question I used to dread — 'are there a lot of mosquitoes?' — into a selling point. Now I answer every comment: our site gets professional ULV treatment weekly, certificate on hand. Some guests book right after reading that." — Karn, campground owner
Q: Will spraying ruin the natural atmosphere that sells the site?
A: No. Treatment happens on guest-free days, the solution biodegrades without accumulating in soil or plants, and strict buffer zones protect all natural water.
Q: Are guests' pets safe?
A: Yes — the solution dries completely many hours before check-in and is certified mammal-safe.
Q: We're in a remote province. Do you travel?
A: Yes, WHD serves clients nationwide — resorts, campgrounds, and factories across many provinces.
Q: How often in the rainy season?
A: Weekly during peak rains — the mosquito life cycle is only 7–10 days — combined with emptying standing water around the site every morning.
Mosquito-borne disease information: Department of Disease Control | World Health Organization
If your campground, glamping site, or nature stay is taking mosquito reviews, turn the weakness into a selling point today.
See Our Mosquito Spray Service — Click Here
Call 065-556-6294 | LINE: @whd268 | Free site survey and quotation
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