HOW TO GET RID OF
SUGAR ANTS!

Getting rid of ants is never a simple proposition, despite
their simple nature. Luckily for you, you are trying to get rid of sugar ants,
and they are probably the most simple-minded ant species. What do they eat? They
eat sugar, sweets, and other scraps of food. This is why we call them sugar
ants. Of course, the term sugar ant is actually a misnomer. The real Sugar Ant
is a native of the Australian continent, and exclusive to that part of the
world. Pavement ants and Pharaoh ants are most mistakenly referred to as sugar
ants, and they happen to be the most abundant ants here on the North American
continent.
For the purposes of maintaining simplicity in this
article, we will refer to both Pharaoh and Pavement ants as sugar ants. After
all, both ants are controlled and killed the same way. So, are you ready to get
rid of sugar ants? Good. Let us begin with controlling a sugar ant infestation
and then move on to killing sugar ants.
Sugar Ant Control
Sugar ant control is very much a matter of daily
routine during the months when sugar ants are a problem (March through
September), particularly in the kitchen. Below is a list of things you can do to
control sugar ants and prevent a sugar an infestation in your home.
If you want to control sugar ants, you need to keep your kitchen sink
clean and dry. Sugar ants love a dirty sink and the water you leave them to help
wash down the leftovers. Make sure to rinse out any dishes you're going to leave
in the sink over night. And when you do clean the dishes, make sure you rinse
and wipe down the entire sink to make certain you haven't left residual sweets,
food, or moisture behind. If you're really picky about cleaning, you might even
want to try pouring a little bleach down the drain to make sure the smell of
rotting food doesn't attract more ants to your kitchen. Dish drains should also
be emptied and wiped down befor the end of the day.
Wipe down kitchen counter tops with bleach each night to get rid of sugar
ants. Sugar ants love a dirty countertop almost as much as they love a dirty
sink. I can't count the number of times I've spilled a few crystals of sugar
(for my morning coffee) from the sugar cup on the counter, only to find I've fed
an entire colony of ants the next morning. Wiping your countertops with bleach
will not only help sanitize your kitchen, but bleach breaks down the pheromones
that ants use to follow each other to sources of food.
Sweep and mop your kitchen floor with bleach every night during the
summer to control sugar ants. I worked in a large kitchen long enough to know
that it is in your best interest to sweep and mop your kitchen floor after every
meal, or at least once in the evening to make sure any pheromone trails a scout
sugar ant has made aren't left for other sugar ants to follow. Scraps of food
and residual sugars are easily swept away with a bucket of warm water and
bleach.
Vacuum the floors of spaces where food is regularly consumed to avoid
inviting sugar ants into your home. It might seem like common sense to vacuum
your dining and living rooms to prevent sugar ants from feasting on the
leftovers of your most recent meal, but people just don't get it. So, I thought
I'd mention the fact that sugar ants don't just eat sugar and sweets, they will
eat crumbs of bread, certain types of vegetables and meat as well, even the
remains of other pests that could be hiding in your carpet. Make sure you get
all this stuff off your carpet if you want to get rid of sugar
ants.
Use strong garbage bags and take the trash out regularly to avoid sugar
ant infestations. It's often the case that a garbage bag gets punctured,
dripping fruit juice or some other kind of liquid onto the floor while you're
taking out the trash. Make sure to use strong garbage bags, even garbage bags
that use Arm & Hammer baking soda to deodorize themselves, if you want to
prevent a sugar ant infestation. It should go without saying that taking out the
trash on regular basis will reduce the chances of sugar ants finding their way
into your kitchen.
How to Kill Sugar Ants:
The most common ant baits used to get rid of sugar ants are called
sweet baits, and the most common ingredient found in sweet ant baits is boric
acid, or Borax. Most household ants (pharaoh ants, pavement ants, and little
black ants included) are prone to the poison known as Borax. Borax is a mineral
mined in the deserts of California, refined and dissolved into all manners of
ant bait systems. It is generally non-toxic to humans, though I wouldnt
recommend inhaling or ingesting large amounts of it. It is a slow-acting poison,
which means that when the ants eat the bait (usually corn syrup), the poison
does not kill the ants right away. The ants take some of the sweet bait back to
the colony with them and dispense the poison meal to other ants. This is how
colonies of ants are exterminated, and sugar ants are the easiest ants to kill
because they are small, voracious scavengers. If you want to get rid of sugar
ants or kill a sugar ant colony quickly, I prefer Terro brand sugar ant
baits.
Using
vinegar to clean instead of bleach is a good way to naturally control sugar ant
invasions. Acetic acid, the acid in vinegar that makes it smell so strong, not
only naturally deodorizes (or odorizes, as the case may be), but is one of
nature's most powerful cleaning agents. We recommend using vinegar instead of
bleach on How to Clean Things all the time, and nothing can be more repulsive to
sugar ants than a little White Vinegar. Make sure you use White Vinegar, and not
apple cider vinegar or something like that. The less sugar the better.
Whole
Cloves are apparently a good way to repel invading sugar ants. Whole cloves have
been used to help prevent infestations of all sorts of insects. I imagine it is
the compounds that produce the strong smell in cloves that many pests do not
like, but then, I'm not a biologist like Eric, so I wouldn't know. Suffice to
say that if you leave some whole cloves laying around the house, especially
along baseboards and under counters, you will probably have less sugar ants
scurrying about--and perhaps a better smelling home, if you like cloves that is.
Bay
Leaves are another one of those natural home remedies to control sugar ants that
I haven't tried yet, but a few of the chefs I've worked with in camp kitchens
say that Bay Leaves do in fact keep ants away. Usually they will put them under
countertops where food is prepared and near entrances where ants are likely to
come in. If you want to give it a try, let me know if it works for you.
Using
vinegar to clean instead of bleach is a good way to naturally control sugar ant
invasions. Acetic acid, the acid in vinegar that makes it smell so strong, not
only naturally deodorizes (or odorizes, as the case may be), but is one of
nature's most powerful cleaning agents. We recommend using vinegar instead of
bleach on How to Clean Things all the time, and nothing can be more repulsive to
sugar ants than a little White Vinegar. Make sure you use White Vinegar, and not
apple cider vinegar or something like that. The less sugar the better.
Whole
Cloves are apparently a good way to repel invading sugar ants. Whole cloves have
been used to help prevent infestations of all sorts of insects. I imagine it is
the compounds that produce the strong smell in cloves that many pests do not
like, but then, I'm not a biologist like Eric, so I wouldn't know. Suffice to
say that if you leave some whole cloves laying around the house, especially
along baseboards and under counters, you will probably have less sugar ants
scurrying about--and perhaps a better smelling home, if you like cloves that is.
Bay
Leaves are another one of those natural home remedies to control sugar ants that
I haven't tried yet, but a few of the chefs I've worked with in camp kitchens
say that Bay Leaves do in fact keep ants away. Usually they will put them under
countertops where food is prepared and near entrances where ants are likely to
come in. If you want to give it a try, let me know if it works for you.


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