Is there a way to get rid of ants without killing them?

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sly279
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05 May 2016, 5:44 pm

Ants are making lots of ant hills outside our house in the cracks between our walk way and drive way.

I find it a more dilemma. I don't commit violence or kill things unless i absolutely have to . I fear eventually their make their way into our house :s



kraftiekortie
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05 May 2016, 6:18 pm

I actually don't think so.

I hope people with more knowledge of this issue could chime in.



TheSpectrum
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05 May 2016, 6:36 pm

Put a trail of sugar to your neighbours house and they will have likely moved over there after a week.
Failing that just dig up the hills and move them to somewhere else.


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05 May 2016, 6:58 pm

TheSpectrum wrote:
Put a trail of sugar to your neighbours house and they will have likely moved over there after a week.
Failing that just dig up the hills and move them to somewhere else.


Yikes beat me to it !

When we used to go camping in France , to get all the droves of ants away from our tent / area we put sugar lumps and / or sweets/ candy in the nearby branches of trees . It was facinating observing the thousands of ants on the trees



aspieinaz
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05 May 2016, 10:59 pm

Every summer we had ants coming in by the kitchen window. I heard somewhere that ants won't cross a chalk line, so I drew a thick chalk line on the house below the window. It worked. The ants stopped coming in.


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Yigeren
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05 May 2016, 11:35 pm

No. I have had ants come in where I've lived tons of times. Most of the stuff they say works does not. They will come in if they are close enough, and once they have made a trail for others to follow, they will just keep coming.

I don't like to kill things either, but it's necessary at times. I just do what I have to even though it bothers me. If they haven't come in yet you could spray your house to keep them out. That way the whole colony won't die, just the ones that try to get in.

Ants are either after protein or sugar, depending on the time of year. They may come in your house looking for one or the other.

Carpenter ants are the ones that can destroy your house, and those I'd be worried about most.



ZD
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06 May 2016, 2:12 am

If they can't find food near your house they won't bother with it. So clean out side and yes do use detergent or something.


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ZD
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06 May 2016, 2:13 am

(shouldn't this be in random discussion ;))


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TheSpectrum
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06 May 2016, 5:38 am

The ants might be causing emotional distress.


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06 May 2016, 6:44 am

Ants are attracted to locations by the way they smell. The scent of sugar is an especially powerful attractant. Spilled sugar or sugary crumbs will attract ants, even if those crumbs are too small to be seen by a human. Cleanliness is essential for driving away ants.

Ants also use the sense of smell to track each other. There scent is acidic. An alkaline substance will neutralize their scent. This is why the heavy chalk line worked - chalk is calcium carbonate, which is an alkaline material. Strong detergents are also alkaline. Use lots of strong detergent (un-scented) to clean the kitchen, pantry, and any area where food is eaten (and crumbs are dropped). This should drive those insects away.


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ZD
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06 May 2016, 7:41 am

Fnord wrote:
Ants are attracted to locations by the way they smell. The scent of sugar is an especially powerful attractant. Spilled sugar or sugary crumbs will attract ants, even if those crumbs are too small to be seen by a human. Cleanliness is essential for driving away ants.

Ants also use the sense of smell to track each other. There scent is acidic. An alkaline substance will neutralize their scent. This is why the heavy chalk line worked - chalk is calcium carbonate, which is an alkaline material. Strong detergents are also alkaline. Use lots of strong detergent (un-scented) to clean the kitchen, pantry, and any area where food is eaten (and crumbs are dropped). This should drive those insects away.


Sort of why I said around the house as it will become a natural barrier (but you should be doing the inside anyway! :)). Bbut good point on scentless you don't want your outside spelling of lemons or something lol well suppose lavender would work...


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TheSpectrum
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06 May 2016, 7:50 am

This has to be the most exciting conversation I've ever seen about ants.

sly, what these folks have suggested works. Hopefully the ants will move further away from the house if you apply everything right.


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06 May 2016, 8:08 am

When I lived in the San Francisco Bay Area, I learned that the whole Bay Area went through periods where the nearby mountain ants would seemingly swarm residential areas. Like all living things, they search out fresh water. Once they find it (seasonal rain or creeks), they are satisfied. I like the candied-diversion idea, but I wonder if sharing a little more water with them might cause them to return deep within their colony.


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06 May 2016, 8:13 am

AspieUtah wrote:
When I lived in the San Francisco Bay Area, I learned that the whole Bay Area went through periods where the nearby mountain ants would seemingly swarm residential areas. Like all living things, they search out fresh water. Once they find it (seasonal rain or creeks), they are satisfied. I like the candied-diversion idea, but I wonder if sharing a little more water with them might cause them to return deep within their colony.


good point.

I forget there might be water shortages for them in the area been in the UK tend not to think of it always wet outside... well nearly all the time :)


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sly279
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06 May 2016, 9:14 am

Rains all the time in Oregon.

I don't like the idea of mass murdering ants by the millions :(

I'll try the chalk and see if that helps

I don't get why they've travels so far to my house to make a home in the crack between concrete walk way :s



kraftiekortie
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06 May 2016, 9:37 am

I guess they like your barbecues.