Life as a Spectator Sport

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Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Another use for white vinegar

Long time readers of the blog will have seen my mention of our ant problem. For the first few years here, I didn't see a single ant inside. Then the invasion began, and nothing worked. I tried sprays, I tried commercial pest control companies, I tried baits, the ones that are allegedly carried back to the colony to kill the queens. The baits only made the problem worse, as they attracted more ants inside to feed on them. I could see no evidence that the bait was being taken back to wipe out the nest. I read through every ant control forum I could find on the net, but most of them talked about stopping up the places where ants entered. Even in a new and well-made manufactured home, they can be coming in through hundreds of tiny holes. An old mobile home is basically porous to them, so there is no way to deal with entry points.

Finally, I discovered Ant Pro, an outdoor bait system that is weatherproof, doesn't attract ants inside, and actually works. For months, as long as I kept the bait stations filled, we had no ants inside. But over the winter, I began to see them again, even though there was bait available outside. During the warmer periods, they would go to the outdoor bait stations, but on the coldest winter days, there they were again all over my kitchen counters and in the bathroom.

Finally, I sent an email to Ken Kupfer, the president of KM Ant Pro (as his website suggests), and he not only responded promptly, he actually called me! He asked me to send him a couple of ants, to he could be certain of the exact species I was dealing with, but he also said that I probably had at least one colony nesting in the walls of the trailer. On warmer days they would go after the bait outside, since it was more attractive to them than what little they could find inside. But during the really cold weather, my kitchen and bathroom were far more hospitable.

"What you need to do," he said, "is mix up a solution of 30% distilled vinegar and water, and spray it on the ants with a really fine mist. This disturbs the waxy coating on their abdomens, and it's an alarm signal to the rest of the nest that this isn't a safe place for them. But it needs to be so fine a mist that it won't kill the ants you spray it on. You want them to go back to the nest, so the rest of the foragers know not to return."

And I'll be darned if it didn't work. Yesterday afternoon, I filled my little plant mister with the vinegar and water solution I keep on the counter in a spray bottle, for general cleaning, and I misted the ants in the kitchen and in the bathroom (where the problem was the worst). This morning there were no ants in either location. I've got my fingers crossed that this will continue to work, but at the moment we're ant-free again.

Now if I could just find that simple a solution for the mice . . .

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posted by Liz @ 6:39 AM     |


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