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alec green September 5th 11 03:46 PM

Woodlice problem
 
Hi

I keep finding dead woodlice around the edges my living room carpet,
as well as the occasional one scurrying across the carpet. For the
life of me I can’t find where they are coming from, so I can stop
them. There are no obvious signs of damp which I believe they like. Is
there anything available to track their entry point?

Thanks

Alec

Grimly Curmudgeon September 5th 11 04:50 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On Mon, 5 Sep 2011 07:46:40 -0700 (PDT), alec green
wrote:

There are no obvious signs of damp which I believe they like. Is
there anything available to track their entry point?


You might try a fine coating of dust over a couple of square feet.
How fine it would have to be, I don't know, as I've no idea what kind
of foot pressure/dragging woodlice have.
Failing that, just nuke'em with insect killer.

Lee September 5th 11 06:06 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On 05/09/2011 16:50, Grimly Curmudgeon wrote:

Failing that, just nuke'em with insect killer.


Someone is going to say it.... does insecticide work on crustaceans?

Andrew Gabriel September 5th 11 06:45 PM

Woodlice problem
 
In article ,
alec green writes:
Hi

I keep finding dead woodlice around the edges my living room carpet,
as well as the occasional one scurrying across the carpet. For the
life of me I can=92t find where they are coming from, so I can stop
them. There are no obvious signs of damp which I believe they like. Is
there anything available to track their entry point?


They live off damp rotting wood (but they don't make wood rot).
I would be checking for any damp rotting woodwork inside the
house.

--
Andrew Gabriel
[email address is not usable -- followup in the newsgroup]

Phil L[_3_] September 5th 11 07:17 PM

Woodlice problem
 
Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article
,
alec green writes:
Hi

I keep finding dead woodlice around the edges my living room carpet,
as well as the occasional one scurrying across the carpet. For the
life of me I can=92t find where they are coming from, so I can stop
them. There are no obvious signs of damp which I believe they like.
Is there anything available to track their entry point?


They live off damp rotting wood (but they don't make wood rot).
I would be checking for any damp rotting woodwork inside the
house.


And they are also known as grammerzows, cheeselogs, coffin cutters, monkey
peas and my favourite, chiggy pigs



[email protected] September 5th 11 08:09 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On Mon, 05 Sep 2011 16:50:56 +0100, Grimly Curmudgeon
wrote:

On Mon, 5 Sep 2011 07:46:40 -0700 (PDT), alec green
wrote:

There are no obvious signs of damp which I believe they like. Is
there anything available to track their entry point?


You might try a fine coating of dust over a couple of square feet.
How fine it would have to be, I don't know,


How do you find out which couple of their feet are square?


G.Harman

Adam Funk[_3_] September 5th 11 08:55 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On 2011-09-05, Phil L wrote:

Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article
,
alec green writes:
Hi

I keep finding dead woodlice around the edges my living room carpet,
as well as the occasional one scurrying across the carpet. For the
life of me I can=92t find where they are coming from, so I can stop
them. There are no obvious signs of damp which I believe they like.
Is there anything available to track their entry point?


They live off damp rotting wood (but they don't make wood rot).
I would be checking for any damp rotting woodwork inside the
house.


And they are also known as grammerzows, cheeselogs, coffin cutters, monkey
peas and my favourite, chiggy pigs


Also "pill bugs" and "roly-polies" (not sure about the spelling).

They're supposed to be good to eat too, being the ony terrestrial
member of the shrimp family, although I haven't tried them.

ARWadsworth September 5th 11 10:08 PM

Woodlice problem
 
Andrew Gabriel wrote:

They live off damp rotting wood (but they don't make wood rot).
I would be checking for any damp rotting woodwork inside the
house.


I know that, so I was most surpised to find loads of them under a concrete
hearth that I lifted out of my mates old house last week. This had concrete
floors as well.

--
Adam



Grimly Curmudgeon September 5th 11 10:11 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On Mon, 05 Sep 2011 20:09:30 +0100, wrote:

You might try a fine coating of dust over a couple of square feet.
How fine it would have to be, I don't know,


How do you find out which couple of their feet are square?


Look at their boots, silly.

Devany[_4_] September 5th 11 11:45 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On 05/09/2011 20:55, Adam Funk wrote:
On 2011-09-05, Phil L wrote:

Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article
,
alec writes:
Hi

I keep finding dead woodlice around the edges my living room carpet,
as well as the occasional one scurrying across the carpet. For the
life of me I can=92t find where they are coming from, so I can stop
them. There are no obvious signs of damp which I believe they like.
Is there anything available to track their entry point?

They live off damp rotting wood (but they don't make wood rot).
I would be checking for any damp rotting woodwork inside the
house.


And they are also known as grammerzows, cheeselogs, coffin cutters, monkey
peas and my favourite, chiggy pigs


Also "pill bugs" and "roly-polies" (not sure about the spelling).

They're supposed to be good to eat too, being the ony terrestrial
member of the shrimp family, although I haven't tried them.



Slaters

I ate one once ('at age 3).

Ian Jackson[_2_] September 6th 11 08:10 AM

Woodlice problem
 
In message , Adam Funk
writes
On 2011-09-05, Phil L wrote:

Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In article
,
alec green writes:
Hi

I keep finding dead woodlice around the edges my living room carpet,
as well as the occasional one scurrying across the carpet. For the
life of me I can=92t find where they are coming from, so I can stop
them. There are no obvious signs of damp which I believe they like.
Is there anything available to track their entry point?

They live off damp rotting wood (but they don't make wood rot).
I would be checking for any damp rotting woodwork inside the
house.


And they are also known as grammerzows, cheeselogs, coffin cutters, monkey
peas and my favourite, chiggy pigs


Also "pill bugs" and "roly-polies" (not sure about the spelling).

They're supposed to be good to eat too, being the ony terrestrial
member of the shrimp family, although I haven't tried them.


I wouldn't dream of insulting a woodlouse by calling it anything other
than a "slater".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodlouse
--
Ian

Gordon Henderson September 6th 11 09:32 AM

Woodlice problem
 
In article ,
Ian Jackson wrote:
In message , Adam Funk
writes


And they are also known as grammerzows, cheeselogs, coffin cutters, monkey
peas and my favourite, chiggy pigs


Also "pill bugs" and "roly-polies" (not sure about the spelling).

They're supposed to be good to eat too, being the ony terrestrial
member of the shrimp family, although I haven't tried them.


I wouldn't dream of insulting a woodlouse by calling it anything other
than a "slater".
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woodlouse


Thats what we called them when growing up too - in Scotland.. Maybe
it's a regional thing...

Gordon


Geo[_3_] September 6th 11 05:56 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On Mon, 5 Sep 2011 22:08:04 +0100, "ARWadsworth"
wrote:

Andrew Gabriel wrote:

They live off damp rotting wood (but they don't make wood rot).
I would be checking for any damp rotting woodwork inside the
house.


I know that, so I was most surpised to find loads of them under a concrete
hearth that I lifted out of my mates old house last week. This had concrete
floors as well.


I was removing some loose rendering about 12 feet up the house wall a
few months back and found a family of them underneath (between brick
and render).


Andy Champ[_2_] September 6th 11 09:36 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On 06/09/2011 09:32, Gordon Henderson wrote:
Thats what we called them when growing up too - in Scotland.. Maybe
it's a regional thing...



Even right on the Sussex coast the seashore one is a sea slater.

Andy

Steve Walker[_7_] September 6th 11 10:11 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On 05/09/2011 18:45, Andrew Gabriel wrote:
In ,
alec writes:
Hi

I keep finding dead woodlice around the edges my living room carpet,
as well as the occasional one scurrying across the carpet. For the
life of me I can=92t find where they are coming from, so I can stop
them. There are no obvious signs of damp which I believe they like. Is
there anything available to track their entry point?


They live off damp rotting wood (but they don't make wood rot).
I would be checking for any damp rotting woodwork inside the
house.


We had a slow leak that took us ages to find. The seam on the hot-water
tank had gone, but the water was running along under a floorboard and
dripping off many feet away, in a spot that couldn't be seen due to it
being in a 4" gap between the wall and a joist, under an immovable
cupboard. For months we had damp, but no sign of a leak. The damp lifted
the wallpaper in a downstairs room and we found woodlice living behind
the raised paper - presumably eating either the back of the paper or the
paste as all the wood was fine.

SteveW



Rosie Flora July 25th 18 11:14 PM

Woodlice problem
 
replying to alec green, Rosie Flora wrote:
How did you get rid of them?
I have the same problem I have no dampness but I keep finding dead woodlice in
corners of my lounge which is carpeted

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/uk-diy...em-728730-.htm



Archibald Tarquin Blenkinsopp[_4_] July 26th 18 04:29 AM

Woodlice problem
 
On Wed, 25 Jul 2018 22:14:15 GMT, Rosie Flora
m wrote:

replying to alec green, Rosie Flora wrote:
How did you get rid of them?
I have the same problem I have no dampness but I keep finding dead woodlice in
corners of my lounge which is carpeted


I replaced my skirting board and fitted UPCV doors.

Woodlice were coming in through the front and rear doors. Spray from
garden shops had a slight effect and if I was present in the house all
year might have got them all, but when I pulled off a piece of
skirting the reason for the "invasion" became clear. The little
horrors had chewed paths into the rear of the stuff, the skirting then
became a veritable conduit for a safe quick passage around the house.

Replacing the skirting in the front and rear where the original wooden
doors were has virtually stopped the infestation.

I am slowly replacing all the skirting in the house with MDF, and
still find the odd one or two live woodlice, but the problem has to
all intents and purposes disappeared.

The problem solved itself with the UPVC really and oddly enough after
replacing the door and the skirting in the porch, on my return back
home after a few months away, I used to find little groups of dead
woodlice on the floor near the inside of the front door. This was
after the first year. No sign of that now.

AB

alan_m July 26th 18 06:04 AM

Woodlice problem
 
On 25/07/2018 23:14, Rosie Flora wrote:
replying to alec green, Rosie Flora wrote:
How did you get rid of them?
I have the same problem I have no dampness but I keep finding dead
woodlice in
corners of my lounge which is carpeted


They are eating your decaying floor boards or decaying skirting boards?
They are dead possibly because at some time the timbers have been
treated with a long lasting insecticide for woodworm.

--
mailto : news {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk

Andrew[_22_] July 26th 18 01:26 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On 25/07/2018 23:14, Rosie Flora wrote:
replying to alec green, Rosie Flora wrote:
How did you get rid of them?
I have the same problem I have no dampness but I keep finding dead
woodlice in
corners of my lounge which is carpeted


After 7 years I expect they will be dead by now.

Did you notice the date of the posting ?.

Vir Campestris July 29th 18 09:42 PM

Woodlice problem
 
On 26/07/2018 04:29, Archibald Tarquin Blenkinsopp wrote:
Woodlice were coming in through the front and rear doors. Spray from
garden shops had a slight effect and if I was present in the house all
year might have got them all, but when I pulled off a piece of
skirting the reason for the "invasion" became clear. The little
horrors had chewed paths into the rear of the stuff, the skirting then
became a veritable conduit for a safe quick passage around the house.


I think you'll find they mostly eat rotting wood. Most likely your
skirting was already suspect.

Andy


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