Phil Restan  Photography

Midges

New midge repellent. Smidge is now on the market , produced by the same people who gave us the Midge Forecast.

The Highland biting midge has been  known to reduce grown men and women to tears and a wide range of measures have  been employed over the years in an attempt to thwart the wee terror. These have met with varying degrees of success, but  scientists have yet to come up with the definitive answer and midges still make  life a misery for lovers of the great outdoors in the North of Scotland every  summer.Midge Forecast

It has been estimated that this is costing the Scottish  tourist industry about £286 million a year in lost revenue. A recent study  found that 49% of tourists surveyed said they would not return to Scotland  again at the same time of year because of midges. And 67% of those surveyed  said they would warn friends and family to avoid the midge season in Scotland.

Midges are much smaller than mosquitoes, with a wingspan of  no more than two to three millimetres, and there are more than 1,000 species  worldwide. About 40 of these are found in Scotland  with one species, culicoides impunctatus, being best known for biting people.
         
In Scotland,  midges spend the late autumn and winter as larvae, living below the soil  surface. They begin to emerge as adults in May and June the following year,  encouraged by lengthening days and warmer temperatures. These adults lay eggs  that develop relatively quickly to give a second emergence of adult midges in  late July and August.

Warm weather in August can result in a third generation of  midges, which happens roughly once every three to four years.