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j_sum1
Administrator
Posts: 6320
Registered: 4-10-2014
Location: At home
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Mood: Most of the ducks are in a row
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They don't like hammers that much.
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zed
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Registered: 6-9-2008
Location: Great State of Jefferson, City of Portland
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I have been in a number of houses, that once had roaches, but had them no more.
Boric Acid. They eat it and die. Then, because they are roaches, the living roaches eat the bodies of the dead roaches, and they die too.
Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill,
Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill,
Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill,
Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill, Kill,Kill,
Kill, Kill,Kill, Kill.
Umm. Maybe I got carried away. I hate roaches.
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karlosĀ³
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Registered: 10-1-2011
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Mood: oxazolidinic 8)
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Despite the "german cockroach" being one of the worst roaches around, I have to say in almost four decades of living in germany, I've never seen a
single one of them
Strange...
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Tsjerk
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I have seen them numerous times in Munich, the first couple times I went after them, trying to kill them. But people told me they fly around looking
for food, if you don't have any laying around they won't stick around.
Maybe someone close wasn't being so clean.
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karlosĀ³
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Ok thats munich for you, I guess...
I once travelled via their train station, and my train was delayed so I remained there after it got dark....
It looked like the rats suddenly played ballet on the tracks after the sun went down
I've never seen so much rats at once, and absolutely never such fearless ones at once ever
Horrific experience, but I guess it depends on the cities a lot and differs a whole lot as well.
But, I still hope to never experience any roaches ever, and if so... then I hope I can might acquire a gram of your bromo DDT analogue from you
Or make some on my own.
Its a shame that DDT and analogues have been completely restricted nowadays, just 5 years more on the free market and the planet would have been
eradicated of malaria...
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macckone
Dispenser of practical lab wisdom
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Speaking of rats, they eat cockroaches.
Cockroaches will also kill bedbugs.
But bedbugs will feed on rat.
Like rock paper scissors but with pests.
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Dr.Bob
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I'm still sad they banned Chlordane for termite control. You could apply it around the house in a trench around the foundation, and for 50 years,
there were no termites. It sticks to clay, so it does not wash away or into ground water, and lasts so long that you almost never have to reapply
anything. Diamonds may be forever, but chordane is nearly that good. Fipronil is good for about 10 years, which is not bad, but many other
newer things go away quickly, so you just have to retreat more often, so more overall pesticide use. Hexaflumuron is also a great compound, when
used as a bait system, if you just spray that on the bottom of the studs and the sill plate it would likely keep termites away for years as well, and
not hard to make, I think 2 steps. I made an analog of it a few years back that I happened to find the starting materials for, it was one atom away
from each of two approved compounds, so should be quite effective. Just soak some wood stakes in it and drive them around the foundation. Termites
eat them, take it back to the colony and kill it, like Sentricon or other bait stations, but much simpler and cheaper, as no need to monitor is every
stake is treated already.
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B(a)P
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Quote: Originally posted by Dr.Bob | I'm still sad they banned Chlordane for termite control. You could apply it around the house in a trench around the foundation, and for 50 years,
there were no termites. It sticks to clay, so it does not wash away or into ground water, and lasts so long that you almost never have to reapply
anything. |
These properties make it both amazing and terrible at the same time. The same can be said for Aldrin and Dieldrin. I have worked on two projects where
these compounds added huge amounts to the cost. Both were industrial facilities that liberally applied these compounds during construction in the 50s
and 60s (no evidence of termites in any buildings during demolition ~2010). One site required a specially design on site containment cell to hold all
of the contaminated soil and concrete (this added millions to the project cost). The other required soil to be thermally treated to burn off the OCP
residue (this added many 10s of millions to the project cost). They are amazing products until someone decides they want to do something different
with the land. I still think there are modern applications for these products, but their persistence in the environment, ecotoxicity and potential
impact on human health have obviously kiboshed that. My Grandfather stockpiled a bunch of 245T, Dieldrin and Lucijet back in the 70s and 80s when they
started to get hard to come by, because they were all so effective at what they were designed for. It is a shame we humans couldn't be a little more
responsible with our use of chemicals or we might still have a few of these in our repertoire.
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TriiodideFrog
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You can try using baking soda and sugar in equal parts. Put it in a bowl and place it in a place they frequent.
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itsallgoodjames
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Is bicarb toxic for roaches? That seems like an odd thing to be toxic, but then again, what do I know...
Nuclear physics is neat. It's a shame it's so regulated...
Now that I think about it, that's probably a good thing. Still annoying though.
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