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contrapositive
 
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Default Carpenter Ants!

Hi. We had a mild infestation of carpenter ants in June. We would see them
mostly outdoors in one corner of our brick ranch, but occasionally we'd see
a few stragglers indoors. We called an exterminator right away. He said it
probably had to do with the previous wet fall and mild winter. There was no
damage to our home.

Anyway, after the initial treatment they all vanished, and we've since had
two follow-up treatments. We're schedule for four more at almost $100 a pop.
My contract says I can stop treatments any time, and with winter coming up
(I'm in Pittsburgh) I'm wondering if I'm doing myself any great disservice
by canceling future treatments. Any thoughts? Thanks.

-jk


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Pop
 
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Ask him why you need the treatments. Do the eggs last that long?
Is that why he's treating?
If he's only treating outdoors, I think I'd check with a
competitor and see what htey recommend. Or try google.


"contrapositive" wrote in message
...
: Hi. We had a mild infestation of carpenter ants in June. We
would see them
: mostly outdoors in one corner of our brick ranch, but
occasionally we'd see
: a few stragglers indoors. We called an exterminator right away.
He said it
: probably had to do with the previous wet fall and mild winter.
There was no
: damage to our home.
:
: Anyway, after the initial treatment they all vanished, and
we've since had
: two follow-up treatments. We're schedule for four more at
almost $100 a pop.
: My contract says I can stop treatments any time, and with
winter coming up
: (I'm in Pittsburgh) I'm wondering if I'm doing myself any great
disservice
: by canceling future treatments. Any thoughts? Thanks.
:
: -jk
:
:


  #3   Report Post  
G Henslee
 
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Default

Popped a nut wrote:
Ask him why you need the treatments. Do the eggs last that long?
Is that why he's treating?
If he's only treating outdoors, I think I'd check with a
competitor and see what htey recommend. Or try google.


Translated: "I'm clueless, so I'll ask _you_ questions instead of
answering yours, and send you to google".
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Tim Fischer
 
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Default

Carpenter ants pretty much mean you have water damage/rotten wood.
Carpenter ants don't like good wood.

You may want to investigate what's rotting that is attracting the ants in
the first place. The ants are only a symptom of a deeper problem.

-Tim




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Pop
 
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Default

lol henlee thinks everyone is like him.

"G Henslee" wrote in message
...
: Popped a nut wrote:
: Ask him why you need the treatments. Do the eggs last that
long?
: Is that why he's treating?
: If he's only treating outdoors, I think I'd check with a
: competitor and see what htey recommend. Or try google.
:
:
: Translated: "I'm clueless, so I'll ask _you_ questions instead
of
: answering yours, and send you to google".


  #8   Report Post  
Amun
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"contrapositive" wrote in message
...
Hi. We had a mild infestation of carpenter ants in June. We would see them
mostly outdoors in one corner of our brick ranch, but occasionally we'd

see
a few stragglers indoors. We called an exterminator right away. He said it
probably had to do with the previous wet fall and mild winter. There was

no
damage to our home.

Anyway, after the initial treatment they all vanished, and we've since had
two follow-up treatments. We're schedule for four more at almost $100 a

pop.
My contract says I can stop treatments any time, and with winter coming up
(I'm in Pittsburgh) I'm wondering if I'm doing myself any great disservice
by canceling future treatments. Any thoughts? Thanks.

-jk



With ants it's foolish to go for treating the house when the the ants will
do it for you.

Go to your local hardware/garden center, and look for a squeeze bottle of
"ant drops"

I prefer the "green cross" brand but "raid" and others may be available
where you live.

It's basicly just a clear syrup (poison bait). and costs about $2.00 a
bottle.

I keep it out regualrly on the deck & patio as it keep the little red guys
under control too.


Put down a few drops where you see the ants scurrying on the ground, they
will suck it up and bring it back to the nest and share it with all the
others.

After a few days the nest will be DEAD.

Carpenter ant's don't eat the wood like termites, they just hollow out
tunnels to live in, and carry out the sawdust.
And prefer decaying wood as it's easier to tunnel through.
the sawdust piles outside of the opening always gives away their location.

You might want to see why the nest got established and repair any rotting
wood or water leaking

The usual caveats apply, keep small children out of it, and pets.

AMUN


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Stormin Mormon
 
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Default

I've had good results with liquid ant bait from www.gardensalive.com which
is a lot cheaper than $100 a pop treatments.

--

Christopher A. Young
Do good work.
It's longer in the short run
but shorter in the long run.
..
..


"contrapositive" wrote in message
...
Hi. We had a mild infestation of carpenter ants in June. We would see them
mostly outdoors in one corner of our brick ranch, but occasionally we'd see
a few stragglers indoors. We called an exterminator right away. He said it
probably had to do with the previous wet fall and mild winter. There was no
damage to our home.

Anyway, after the initial treatment they all vanished, and we've since had
two follow-up treatments. We're schedule for four more at almost $100 a pop.
My contract says I can stop treatments any time, and with winter coming up
(I'm in Pittsburgh) I'm wondering if I'm doing myself any great disservice
by canceling future treatments. Any thoughts? Thanks.

-jk



  #10   Report Post  
Norminn
 
Posts: n/a
Default



contrapositive wrote:
Hi. We had a mild infestation of carpenter ants in June. We would see them
mostly outdoors in one corner of our brick ranch, but occasionally we'd see
a few stragglers indoors. We called an exterminator right away. He said it
probably had to do with the previous wet fall and mild winter. There was no
damage to our home.

Anyway, after the initial treatment they all vanished, and we've since had
two follow-up treatments. We're schedule for four more at almost $100 a pop.
My contract says I can stop treatments any time, and with winter coming up
(I'm in Pittsburgh) I'm wondering if I'm doing myself any great disservice
by canceling future treatments. Any thoughts? Thanks.

-jk



I've been fairly certain that I chose the wrong career, and now I know
that I did. $400 for carpenter ants? Outside? Crimany, clean house and
get rid of crumbs. Find where they get in and plug it up. Check the
attic, fascia, soffits and window frames where they are lurking to see
if there is damp or damaged wood.

There are different varieties, and the best resource I have found for
our locale is U of FL - check the extension service in your area. Our
condo was full of them when I moved here, and over two or three years of
working with hubby to clean up and fix the place, we found they only
inhabited dead or damaged wood. They were indoors in only one unit,
which was a filthy mess. By repairing rotted wood, including leaky
roof, dead limbs, rotted fencing, etc., they were eliminated. Also
caulked around windows, plumbing entries, etc. The U of FL has great
info, which bears out what we found by trial and error and trying to
crush them to death with tons of poison. They forage in the evening and
are easy to follow to nest. Tree branches overhanging roof is a
favorite means of entry. Lots of critters will come indoors during
abnormal weather cycles, including coral snakes ) Carpenter ants here
seem to be cyclic, and when more fire ants are present there are less
carpenter ants. Another omnivorous bug here is mole cricket. The
critters are quite interesting when you are trying to get rid of them,
and I favor making the environment less favorable before dumping poison
all over. Boric acid bait allegedly works well, but you have to find
their trail.

This may be helpful:

http://edis.ifas.ufl.edu/IN455

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