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Default Ants & Termites

Out in our shed we had lots of little bitty ants. More than I have EVER
seen before. In the past we've had good luck with Terro for these kind
of ants, but this time the Terro didn't even seem to put a dent in them.
An exterminator was over at the neighbor's so I got him over to look at
the situation. He showed me where the trail of ants was leading over to
an interior wall of the shed. This is an old shed, and it's divided in
2 parts by a wall that has siding on both sides. He showed me the mud
lines along the seams of the siding. Mud lines from termites inside
that wall. He told me ants are a natural predator of termites, and the
ants were feeding on the termites and then bringing the food outside to
their nest. I could see the ants carrying little bits on their way out.
When I made the guess to him that the ants would take care of the
termite problem, he then said the termites would start multiplying in
force and not be killed off completely. He gave me a bid of $250. to
take care of the termites and ants. I told him I'd think about it.
A couple of days later the ants were all gone. I had given up on the
Terro much earlier so I don't think it was the Terro that did it.
Do you think the exterminator was telling me fibs, and the ants did kill
off all of the termites and then quit coming in to the wall because
there was no food there for them anymore?

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I don't know about the termites - and I don't know about outside ants.
But I can tell you that this year we have had a lot of very tiny ants
in our kitchen. And I learned one thing....Terro that was left over
from last year would not work on them. I tried it several times and it
did nothing. I went down and bought some new Terro .... and the ants
were gone almost overnight.

I doubt if the ants killed the termites. If this is an old shed (as
opposed to main house where you live) I would call around and find some
termite poison and try to treat it myself.

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Patty O wrote:

Out in our shed we had lots of little bitty ants. More than I have EVER
seen before. In the past we've had good luck with Terro for these kind
of ants, but this time the Terro didn't even seem to put a dent in them.
An exterminator was over at the neighbor's so I got him over to look at
the situation. He showed me where the trail of ants was leading over to
an interior wall of the shed. This is an old shed, and it's divided in
2 parts by a wall that has siding on both sides. He showed me the mud
lines along the seams of the siding. Mud lines from termites inside
that wall. He told me ants are a natural predator of termites, and the
ants were feeding on the termites and then bringing the food outside to
their nest. I could see the ants carrying little bits on their way out.
When I made the guess to him that the ants would take care of the
termite problem, he then said the termites would start multiplying in
force and not be killed off completely. He gave me a bid of $250. to
take care of the termites and ants. I told him I'd think about it.
A couple of days later the ants were all gone. I had given up on the
Terro much earlier so I don't think it was the Terro that did it.
Do you think the exterminator was telling me fibs, and the ants did kill
off all of the termites and then quit coming in to the wall because
there was no food there for them anymore?

Is the shed on a slab? Got mud tubes from ground to the wood? We have
ants that leave a trail of dirt along a seam on a plastic fence.
Termite mud tubes are quite different, and would lead from ground to
wood. You can scrape away mud tubes, and if they aren't re-built, then
the colony is no longer active. Scrape away the stuff on your seams,
tap around and poke into the wood with an awl or screw driver. If
termites have eaten into the wood, you should be able to detect some
deteriorated wood signs - blistery looking paint, hollow sound to wood,
or probe digging right into the wood. $250 to treat a shed seems a bit
steep - would probably buy a lot of new wood )
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Default Ants & Termites

Well, He was right about the "ants preying on the termites" part, I'll
attest. Tom
Patty O wrote:
Out in our shed we had lots of little bitty ants. More than I have EVER
seen before. In the past we've had good luck with Terro for these kind
of ants, but this time the Terro didn't even seem to put a dent in them.
An exterminator was over at the neighbor's so I got him over to look at
the situation. He showed me where the trail of ants was leading over to
an interior wall of the shed. This is an old shed, and it's divided in
2 parts by a wall that has siding on both sides. He showed me the mud
lines along the seams of the siding. Mud lines from termites inside
that wall. He told me ants are a natural predator of termites, and the
ants were feeding on the termites and then bringing the food outside to
their nest. I could see the ants carrying little bits on their way out.
When I made the guess to him that the ants would take care of the
termite problem, he then said the termites would start multiplying in
force and not be killed off completely. He gave me a bid of $250. to
take care of the termites and ants. I told him I'd think about it.
A couple of days later the ants were all gone. I had given up on the
Terro much earlier so I don't think it was the Terro that did it.
Do you think the exterminator was telling me fibs, and the ants did kill
off all of the termites and then quit coming in to the wall because
there was no food there for them anymore?


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(Patty O) wrote in
:

Out in our shed we had lots of little bitty ants. More than I have
EVER seen before. In the past we've had good luck with Terro for
these kind of ants, but this time the Terro didn't even seem to put a
dent in them. An exterminator was over at the neighbor's so I got him
over to look at the situation. He showed me where the trail of ants
was leading over to an interior wall of the shed. This is an old
shed, and it's divided in 2 parts by a wall that has siding on both
sides. He showed me the mud lines along the seams of the siding. Mud
lines from termites inside that wall. He told me ants are a natural
predator of termites, and the ants were feeding on the termites and
then bringing the food outside to their nest. I could see the ants
carrying little bits on their way out. When I made the guess to him
that the ants would take care of the termite problem, he then said the
termites would start multiplying in force and not be killed off
completely. He gave me a bid of $250. to take care of the termites
and ants. I told him I'd think about it. A couple of days later the
ants were all gone. I had given up on the Terro much earlier so I
don't think it was the Terro that did it. Do you think the
exterminator was telling me fibs, and the ants did kill off all of the
termites and then quit coming in to the wall because there was no food
there for them anymore?



I moved to the mid south a couple of yrs ago from way north where there
are no fire ants or termites at all. Quickly learned about the fire ants
and just how nasty they can be. Property had been vacant for some time.
Fire ants had many many mounds in the undisturbed grass. To get them
managed initially I called an exterminator to come juice the mounds and
foundation. She did say the one good thing about fire ants was they will
kill termites.

One day I find an old piece of wood way in the back of the yard. I pull
it up to toss out and there's termites in it. What I learned about fire
ant mounds is you tap around it and in a matter of a few seconds
hundreds are pouring out to kill whatever. So I put this piece of
termite ridden wood next to a decent fire ant pile. Tap on the ground
with my shoe toe. Out they came. You shoulda seen those ants tear them
up climbing into the holes and pulling out what was hidden too. I figure
must take like chicken to them.

So, fire ants and termites have a useful purpose - entertainment.


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clipped

So, fire ants and termites have a useful purpose - entertainment.


Don't forget the carpenter ants! They are awesome - they have strong
jays and can hang on to skin like nothing I have seen. When my grandson
was a toddler, he liked to pick them up and squash them between his
fingers! Ick! Our tree trimmer, once in a while, comes flying down the
ladder and does a dance to get the nasties off himself. Termies and
carpenter ants share housing, but seem to alternate in dominance year to
year. Disturb a carpenter ant mound and they come pouring out with
their offspring on their backs. Hubby and I used to time fire ants
coming out to eat the bait we laid down - record was 24 seconds ) I
understand africanized bees are in Florida - doubt they will be as
entertaining, butcha never know.

I used to do nature photography and when I was new to Florida, I thought
mebbe my tripod had a fire ant-mound magnet in it; never failed that I
would have a perfect shot ready to shoot on top of a fire ant mound with
the nasties crawling on my feet )
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On Sat, 8 Jul 2006 14:45:53 -0500, (Patty O)
wrote:

Out in our shed we had lots of little bitty ants. More than I have EVER
seen before. In the past we've had good luck with Terro for these kind
of ants, but this time the Terro didn't even seem to put a dent in them.
An exterminator was over at the neighbor's so I got him over to look at
the situation. He showed me where the trail of ants was leading over to
an interior wall of the shed. This is an old shed, and it's divided in
2 parts by a wall that has siding on both sides. He showed me the mud
lines along the seams of the siding. Mud lines from termites inside
that wall. He told me ants are a natural predator of termites, and the
ants were feeding on the termites and then bringing the food outside to
their nest. I could see the ants carrying little bits on their way out.
When I made the guess to him that the ants would take care of the
termite problem, he then said the termites would start multiplying in
force and not be killed off completely. He gave me a bid of $250. to
take care of the termites and ants. I told him I'd think about it.
A couple of days later the ants were all gone. I had given up on the
Terro much earlier so I don't think it was the Terro that did it.
Do you think the exterminator was telling me fibs, and the ants did kill
off all of the termites and then quit coming in to the wall because
there was no food there for them anymore?


I have doubts the exterminator was telling you fibs. The bid sound
high for a shed, so in this case you might consider treating the
problem yourself. See if the colony is active, poke around the wood
to search for damage using an awl, use a product made for termites,
and periodically re-inspect. Keep the area around the shed clean,
dry, and clutter-free. I give my house a five-minute foundation
inspection about once a month--no termites yet!
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"Patty O" wrote in message
...
Do you think the exterminator was telling me fibs, and the ants did kill
off all of the termites and then quit coming in to the wall because
there was no food there for them anymore?


I don't know about the ants, but if you don't pay the exterminator his $250,
he'll probably disappear along with the ants. When the food is gone, the
termites will be gone...and your shed.

Randy R. Cox


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In article , Patty1976
@webtv.net says...
Out in our shed we had lots of little bitty ants. More than I have EVER
seen before. In the past we've had good luck with Terro for these kind
of ants, but this time the Terro didn't even seem to put a dent in them.

Ants diets change for the needs of the colony. One time a sugar bait
works great, the next time if they are feeding on proteins so they
totally ignore it. Another situation depending on the type of ant,
foraging ant trails are just a small percentage of the colony. So when
you have a few dozen ants at a time in the kitchen putting out the bait
can get quick results on a nest of a thousand or so ants. A foraging
trail of a colony with a population of 200,000 can end up being a trail
of "More than I have EVER seen before" and can take quite awhile before
you see a noticeable reduction with the baits.



An exterminator was over at the neighbor's so I got him over to look at
the situation. He showed me where the trail of ants was leading over to
an interior wall of the shed. This is an old shed, and it's divided in
2 parts by a wall that has siding on both sides. He showed me the mud
lines along the seams of the siding. Mud lines from termites inside
that wall. He told me ants are a natural predator of termites, and the
ants were feeding on the termites and then bringing the food outside to
their nest. I could see the ants carrying little bits on their way out.
When I made the guess to him that the ants would take care of the
termite problem, he then said the termites would start multiplying in
force and not be killed off completely.

Some ants are natural predators to termites, the tiny ants will not be.
I have never heard of the ants that do forage on termites,(fire ants,
carpenter ants) being able to eliminate a termite colony.




He gave me a bid of $250. to
take care of the termites and ants. I told him I'd think about it.
A couple of days later the ants were all gone. I had given up on the
Terro much earlier so I don't think it was the Terro that did it.
Do you think the exterminator was telling me fibs, and the ants did kill
off all of the termites and then quit coming in to the wall because
there was no food there for them anymore?

Possibly the Terro worked after more time but I would guess what you
were seeing was the colony in transit moving from one nest site to
another and what you thought was "food particles" may of been
eggs/pupa/larvae the ants were carrying to the new nest site. Really
impossible to say for sure.

--
Lar

It is said that the early bird gets the worm,
but it is the second mouse that gets the cheese.
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Dottie, I never thought about Terro becoming ineffective as it ages, but
I went through my old bottle the 2nd day and bought a new one and used
it the next 3 days. I still had ants for the next 7 - 10 days so I
don't think age was an issue, but thanks for the tip.
Terro usually works pretty quick and now 2 or 3 weeks later the ants are
gone, so that's why I thought they might have completely killed off the
termite colony.

Normin & Phisherman, The siding is 4' wide sheets so the seams run
vertically. The mud lines along the seams start at the floor and go
about half way up. I suppose I'll peel the corner of a sheet away and
see what it looks like inside. Hope they're all dead or gone!



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Lar, That was interesting and very informative. Thanks for the
response.

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Norminn wrote in
ink.net:

clipped

So, fire ants and termites have a useful purpose - entertainment.


Don't forget the carpenter ants! They are awesome - they have strong
jays and can hang on to skin like nothing I have seen. When my
grandson was a toddler, he liked to pick them up and squash them
between his fingers!


You needed to give that youngin' a magnifying glass and show him how to
use it with the sun. They love the Snap-Cracle-Pop!

Ick! Our tree trimmer, once in a while, comes flying down the
ladder and does a dance to get the nasties off himself. Termies and
carpenter ants share housing, but seem to alternate in dominance year
to year. Disturb a carpenter ant mound and they come pouring out with
their offspring on their backs. Hubby and I used to time fire ants
coming out to eat the bait we laid down - record was 24 seconds )


I think you timed a fire ant nursing home.

I
understand africanized bees are in Florida - doubt they will be as
entertaining, butcha never know.

I used to do nature photography and when I was new to Florida, I
thought mebbe my tripod had a fire ant-mound magnet in it; never
failed that I would have a perfect shot ready to shoot on top of a
fire ant mound with the nasties crawling on my feet )



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