The Night the Mosquitoes Swarmed the Temple Fair: A Lesson in Pre-Event Mosquito Spraying

Last updated: 16 Jun 2026  |  17 Views  | 

The Night the Mosquitoes Swarmed the Temple Fair: A Lesson in Pre-Event Mosquito Spraying

The Night the Mosquitoes Swarmed the Temple Fair: A Lesson in Pre-Event Mosquito Spraying

A true account from a fair organizing-committee chairperson, when the joy of thousands nearly turned into a community dengue crisis, and how the mosquito spray service from World Health Disinfection (WHD) turned the situation around.

Part 1 The Evening the Swarm Descended on the Festival

Mr. Somchai Pantong, chairperson of the annual temple fair committee at the canal-side Wat Bang Pho community, recalls that night with a clarity that still unsettles him. The temple's annual merit-making fair ran for five consecutive nights, from the 24th to the 28th of late October, spread across a wide open temple ground beside the canal that had long been the pride of the entire sub-district. There was a stage for traditional performances, more than sixty food stalls, a Ferris wheel, and merit-making booths. Every year, several thousand people poured in each night: elderly devotees coming to pay respects, children eager for the rides, and families settling in to share a meal on the grounds.

But on the very first night of the fair that year, as the sun dipped below the horizon around six in the evening, something Mr. Somchai had never anticipated unfolded. Countless mosquitoes rose from the canal edge and the tall grass beside the temple ground, descending upon the tightly packed crowd. Small children began to cry as their arms and legs erupted in red welts. Elderly visitors seated to listen to the sermon had to get up and flee mid-way. Food vendors waved fans to drive off the swarms and could barely sell their dishes. The grumbling grew louder and louder until it became a stream of complaints reaching the committee's table.

"I stood in front of the stage and watched people slapping at mosquitoes across the entire ground. Children crying, grandmothers complaining. It wasn't just an annoyance. It was a picture telling me we couldn't take care of the people who came to make merit with us," Mr. Somchai said.

The Pain That Ran Deeper Than the Bites

For an ordinary visitor, mosquitoes at a temple fair might be a passing nuisance. But for Mr. Somchai as chairperson, it was a heavy burden on his shoulders. A merit-making fair is not merely a celebration; it is a public space where the entire community places its trust. The comfort of thousands of people each night was the committee's direct responsibility, and when people had to endure swarms of mosquitoes all evening, the joy of the occasion was instantly diminished.

Yet what kept Mr. Somchai awake at night, even more than the complaints, was the fear of a dengue cluster after the event. When thousands of people gather in an area teeming with Aedes mosquitoes, a single bite from an infected mosquito can pass the disease along. And once everyone disperses back to their homes in every direction, if multiple cases were to surface across the sub-district at once, a fair intended to create merit could become the source of a public health crisis for the community.

The World Health Organization (WHO) notes that dengue spreads through Aedes mosquitoes that bite at dawn and dusk, precisely the hours when the temple fair comes alive. Each year, hundreds of millions of people worldwide are infected. This information only reinforced that the risk was anything but distant. The reputation of a fair built up over decades could collapse overnight; if next year word spread that "people went to the temple fair and came home sick," no one would dare attend again.

Why the Usual Fixes Fail

  • Smoke from a single fogging pass before the event disperses and fades quickly in the open air. By nightfall, the mosquitoes have returned in full force.
  • The canal beside the temple ground is a breeding site that produces new generations of mosquitoes without pause, so killing only the adults is like carrying water in a basket.
  • Mosquito coils stand no chance of protecting a crowd in an open, breezy space. The smoke drifts away before it ever reaches a person.
  • Having committee members hand out repellent to thousands of attendees is simply not feasible in practice.

Part 2 The Answer the Committee Was Searching For: WHD's Mosquito Spray Service

After that year ended in complaints and worry, Mr. Somchai resolved that the following year must never see a repeat. He began searching for a professional provider and discovered World Health Disinfection (WHD), which specializes in mosquito spray services for large events and public spaces. When he consulted the team, he found the answer he had been looking for all along. WHD does not simply chase down adult mosquitoes; it tackles the source by planning to spray the entire temple ground and the full length of the canal edge before the gates open, so the crowds can enjoy the fair safely.

10 Reasons Fairs and Large Events Choose WHD

  1. Large-ground treatment The team can spray across the entire wide temple ground, not just one spot, covering the stage zone, the food-stall zone, and the rides zone.
  2. Canal breeding-site control WHD focuses on treating the canal edge and tall grass where mosquitoes originate, breaking the cycle of new generations rather than merely chasing adults.
  3. Scheduled before the gates open Every treatment is completed before the gates open and before the crowds arrive, sparing attendees disruption and allowing the agents to work at full effect.
  4. Trained crew The technicians are skilled, know the risk points, and understand the dosing and techniques suited to open, breezy grounds.
  5. Documentation for the temple committee WHD prepares operational records for the committee to keep as evidence, useful for reporting to authorities and reassuring the community.
  6. Suited to multi-day events The spray plan is designed to cover the full duration of a fair spanning several nights, not just a single evening.
  7. Appropriately selected products The agents and methods chosen account for the safety of people, food, and the environment within the event area.
  8. Site assessment beforehand The temple ground and canal edge are surveyed in advance to identify risk points and plan with precision.
  9. Reduced post-event dengue risk Tackling the source helps lower the chance of a cluster forming after attendees disperse.
  10. Protecting the community's reputation A fair that looks after its attendees earns trust and brings people back year after year.

Before and After Using WHD

Before

Swarms attacked from dusk. Children cried, the elderly fled, vendors couldn't sell. Complaints rang out across the whole event. The committee lay awake fearing news of illness afterward, and the fair's reputation hung in the balance.

After

The temple ground and canal edge were sprayed before the gates opened. People listened to sermons, ate, and enjoyed the rides in comfort across all five nights. No complaints about mosquitoes, no reports of dengue after the event, and the committee held operational documentation in hand.

A Word From the Fair Committee Chairperson

"This year I stood in front of the stage again, but the picture was as different as night and day. No one was slapping mosquitoes, no children crying, and the grandmothers sat through the entire sermon. I thank the WHD team for spraying the whole ground and the canal edge before the fair. They worked quietly and finished before the crowds came, and they even gave me documentation to present to the committee. Our merit-making fair truly returned to being a joy for the community again."

Mr. Somchai Pantong, Chairperson, Wat Bang Pho Canal-Side Temple Fair Committee

Part 3 Host a Mosquito-Free Fair or Event, Starting Here

Whether it is a temple fair, a merit-making festival, a charity fair, an open-air concert, or a large waterside event, do not let mosquitoes ruin the joy of thousands of attendees. Let WHD treat your grounds before the gates open.

See the Mosquito Spray Service and Pricing, Click Here

Call 065-556-6294
LINE: @whd268

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

How long before the event should spraying take place?

Generally the team plans to complete the treatment before the gates open and before the crowds arrive, allowing the agents to take full effect without disrupting attendees. The team will recommend the right timing based on your site and event schedule.

For events running several consecutive nights, is spraying needed every night?

It depends on the site conditions and breeding sources. The WHD team assesses and plans the spraying frequency to cover the full duration of the event, especially where a canal or water source serves as a continuous breeding ground.

Is spraying safe for attendees and for food at the stalls?

WHD selects products and methods that prioritize safety and plans the spraying before the food stalls open and before people arrive, so the area is ready and safe by event time.

Is operational documentation provided to the committee?

Yes. WHD prepares operational records for the committee to keep as evidence, useful for reporting and for reassuring the community and relevant authorities.

Does mosquito spraying genuinely reduce dengue risk?

Managing both adult mosquitoes and breeding sites helps reduce mosquito numbers and the chance of transmission. It should be done alongside eliminating standing water as advised by the Department of Disease Control.

Follow our mosquito spray service for events and public spaces at

#MosquitoSpray #TempleFair #MosquitoFreeEvent #MosquitoControl #MosquitoSprayService #DenguePrevention

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