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antiboy
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How to kill or at least repel or block ants?
Hi. I am being attacked by ants. They want to kill me.
How can I kill them so they don't kill me?
I am interested in household and common and natural (salt, water, plants) chemicals instead of poisonuous ones and damaging for environment (Cl, As,
Pb, cyanides...).
I already tried putting NaCl in their tunnel through which they are coming into my home, but although with a bit of delay, they just dig through that
tunnel. Now they are simply passing through salt tunnel.
I am talking about larger faster ants, not those small ones that are not that big issue and not so fast.
I also took picture of one of them and became scary because he looks like monster, except not noticable from distance because they are small. He looks
extremely angry and ready for war.
My current method of handling is to step on them with foot until they turn into juicy dead body. Can't find better solution. In fact, even if I block
them from coming into home, there are so many outside and they have built their base under home and can find it via pheromones and will probably just
stand in front and wait or find another way.
Outside there are also other ant bases (homes) and I am talking about hundreds of thousands of ants, of which probably third is under my home,
probably feeding their queen or something.
[Edited on 5-5-2019 by antiboy]
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j_sum1
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Sugar syrup with dissolved borax. Feed generously for several days. They will die.
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fusso
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Can this kill cockroaches?
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Sulaiman
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Boric acid sprinkled in dry places where arthropods may make a trail is fairly effective.
Ants ... so many types.
In UK I used Nippon brand ant poison with great effect.
When I deployed the same product against some ants that invaded my home in Malaysia,
they returned to their nest - to bring their relatives back to my kitchen for a feast
CAUTION : Hobby Chemist, not Professional or even Amateur
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antiboy
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Maybe your product expired. Btw I am very well aware of existing chemical solution like these: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Pesticides and https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Template:Insecticides
But I am looking for much more common stuff than borax or common chemicals like HCl or bleach. Something at least as natural and as common as table
salt or water. Something even even old folks would know how to use. Is there some abundant, free, natural product in unlimited supply? I would of
course use animals ant eaters who eat thousands of ants if I planned to stay for longer on the same area, but I am looking for quick natural solution.
Many people on internet advised salt, lemon, vinegar and god-knows-what, and none worked. Is there anything weaker than chemicals but stronger than
let's say water? Also if possible to use some natural trick that mother nature teaches us such as lowering temperature to freeze whole ant bases then
digging them out and moving them to another location in frozen state, aka simulate winter or even just rainy weather (they are inactive at specific
weather and time, mostly in morning and always in rain). What makes ant know when it will rain? Pressure, water, dark sky? I would use this solid
freezing and excavation but as I said I need quick solution, least effort.
[Edited on 5-5-2019 by antiboy]
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kulep
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Borax is as common as it gets. A kerosene and water emulsion works too, but some people don't find dead dinosaurs very natural
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Chemetix
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They hate clay, I sprinkled dry clay around where they were coming out a wall and into my kitchen, wiping some on the surfaces around the hole. They
got the message and eventually went somewhere else. Took about a week for the message to get to everybody.
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karlos³
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Isn't celite something that acts on them, drying their trachea out when they crawl over it?
Or is this only true for other arthropods like mites, not ants(because they reach a higher level?).
OT, now I have to think of the ants on stilts experiment
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Sulaiman
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I don't know what it is but this type of chalk sticks are popular
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/2PCS-Miraculous-Pests-Control-Cha...
CAUTION : Hobby Chemist, not Professional or even Amateur
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Morgan
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It's possibly that stuff they use in dynamite, diatomaceous earth.
[Edited on 5-5-2019 by Morgan]
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sodium_stearate
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kill everything
chlordane
"Opportunity is missed by most people
because it is dressed in overalls and it
looks like work" T.A. Edison
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karlos³
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Isn't diatomaceous earth the same as celite?
I think the chalk sticks have another use...
Nobody else remembers from childhood how ants are seemingly not able to cross a drawn chalk line?
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MrHomeScientist
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Two new accounts in one day, and now resorting to sockpuppeting? That's a new record low for you, PhD.
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phlogiston
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Dishwasher soap blocks the ants we have here quite well.
-----
"If a rocket goes up, who cares where it comes down, that's not my concern said Wernher von Braun" - Tom Lehrer
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Morgan
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"How to use it: Draw a chalk line wherever you want to keep away crawling insects."
d. e. bug chalk - Diatomaceous Earth Chalk
http://www.habitationessentials.com/store/p1/d._e._bug_chalk...
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Herr Haber
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A couple of years ago a scabies problem almost led me to synthesize massive amounts of chloropicrin.
The first idea was HCN but then I thought of my neighbours
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fusso
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Hey everyone, stop giving serious replies to this thread. OP is PhD who's recognised as a longtime troll by longtime
members. Stop giving serious replies so he cant accomplish what he want.
[Edited on 190507 by fusso]
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DrP
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Quote: Originally posted by Sulaiman | Ants ... so many types.
In UK I used Nippon brand ant poison with great effect.
When I deployed the same product against some ants that invaded my home in Malaysia,
they returned to their nest - to bring their relatives back to my kitchen for a feast |
Yea - I've noticed foreign ants are tougher... I once saw a load of rather large ants in Greece... they were about a cm long (much bigger than UK
ants). I was young and decided to step on one... it popped back up and walked off... I stepped on it and scrapped my shoe over it, spreading it
along the concrete, thinking that this would destroy it. I got a huge surprise when I lifted my foot to see a tangle of ant limbs that slowly started
to untangle themselves and 'pop' back up to a full standing ant and that just went merrily on it's way - seemingly indestructible!
Sorry - wanted to reply to Sulaiman with my ant anecdote.
[Edited on 7-5-2019 by DrP]
\"It\'s a man\'s obligation to stick his boneration in a women\'s separation; this sort of penetration will increase the population of the younger
generation\" - Eric Cartman
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MrHomeScientist
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Antecdote?
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Corrosive Joeseph
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This is priceless.......... And not one reply......... Nobody even batted an eyelid.
Yup.......... and also keiselguhr and cat litter 'stuff' and about 20 other things.
Regarding the imaginary ants.......... I thought Borax was traditional.
/CJ
Being well adjusted to a sick society is no measure of one's mental health
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morganbw
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Quote: Originally posted by fusso | Hey everyone, stop giving serious replies to this thread. OP is PhD who's recognised as a longtime troll by longtime
members. Stop giving serious replies so he cant accomplish what he want.
[Edited on 190507 by fusso] |
It looks like Ph.D. has started a nice thread. He is gone so let the thread go where threads go. I am enjoying reading it.
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sodium_stearate
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No Help
This is not a good place to ask about methods
for getting rid of any kind of pests such as insects or
animals.
All you are going to get if you ask those sorts of questions
here are boo-hoo, so sorry the pests must die.
Like I said, if you want to get rid of ants, get some
chlordane. There will not be much of anything else
alive in the vicinity either....
"Opportunity is missed by most people
because it is dressed in overalls and it
looks like work" T.A. Edison
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andy1988
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Diatomaceous earth causes insects to dry out and die by absorbing the oils and fats from the cuticle of the insect's exoskeleton. Its sharp edges are
abrasive, speeding up the process [1]. You can find it in a bag in the gardening section of stores, sometimes it isn't sold pure and is mixed with other stuff.
EDIT: Molasses fertilizer tilled into soil, found in agricultural stores (50lb bags mixed with silage or whatever). It drives fungal
growth, which overtakes ant nests and drives them out of the area. It is an "organic" pest control method. EDIT2: It is the
explanation I'd read on an "organic" grower website, I can't find the reference.
Quote: Originally posted by fusso | Hey everyone, stop giving serious replies to this thread. OP is PhD who's recognised as a longtime troll by longtime members. Stop giving serious
replies so he cant accomplish what he want. |
Troll isn't an appropriate label for Ph.D and I don't think it fair to call him that. Troll indicates a malicious intent. Disabled would be a more
appropriate label. He's written elsewhere the misfortune of being through a psych-ward, homeless, and the intention of innovating. Honestly I'm impressed that he does not try to scam or steal like so many others would in his unfortunate situation "I
tried stealing too, but don't like that feeling...", and aspires to do better, but has difficulty doing that where he is and from whatever ailments he
suffers from. Which is why he keeps coming back here I suppose.
He reminds me of a long time commenter on phys.org, who for years would push a fringe physics theory every opportunity he could. Again and again,
others would criticize it as lacking evidence or whatever. Eventually when he posted something personally identifiable (last name and first initial I
think), we discovered he was a elderly professor emeritus, with an office, honorable title and such at a university which had all been stripped of him
after he was convicted of inappropriate conduct with a grandchild. So we speculated he was really hurt, trying to... leave a legacy or redeem himself
somehow. It explained the maladaptive thinking.
EDIT: In Ph.D.'s last post he's angry at his situation... I do take pity on him. I do genuinely think he's disabled.
Ph.D. on this forum we want to promote high quality material. Non-contributive material is removed. Have you heard of MIT OpenCourseWare? I think it would help to further your education as time permits.
[Edited on 8-5-2019 by andy1988]
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DrP
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hahaha! Yea that's funny. I almost deliberately spelled it that way to make the pun but thought someone might think it was my dyslexia rather than a
joke. lol.
\"It\'s a man\'s obligation to stick his boneration in a women\'s separation; this sort of penetration will increase the population of the younger
generation\" - Eric Cartman
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fusso
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Bedridden? How dare u claim that w/o photo proof?!
[Edited on 190508 by fusso]
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