Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The natural spray will not kill mosquitoes, only irritate them and will leave the area. Synthetic sprays are the best way to handle them. We use plant based crysanthimum spray. Please don't fall for the hype and war against pesticides. As a licensed and trained applicator we do only what's needed to gain control. Most people use more chemicals to clean their house then i ever would to treat for pests. Also, is it worth the risk to not treat properly and expose your family to west nile virus, malaria and dengue fever. And, don't forget, what we spray is the same chemical you apply to your dog and cat. Why would you not protect your family?
Ummmm...That's a lousy argument. Those chemicals people put on their pets are not regulated by the FDA and can have horrible, permanent side effects.
You need to rethink your marketing strategy if that's your best argument for using your product.
Anonymous wrote:The natural spray will not kill mosquitoes, only irritate them and will leave the area. Synthetic sprays are the best way to handle them. We use plant based crysanthimum spray. Please don't fall for the hype and war against pesticides. As a licensed and trained applicator we do only what's needed to gain control. Most people use more chemicals to clean their house then i ever would to treat for pests. Also, is it worth the risk to not treat properly and expose your family to west nile virus, malaria and dengue fever. And, don't forget, what we spray is the same chemical you apply to your dog and cat. Why would you not protect your family?
Anonymous wrote:The natural spray will not kill mosquitoes, only irritate them and will leave the area. Synthetic sprays are the best way to handle them. We use plant based crysanthimum spray. Please don't fall for the hype and war against pesticides. As a licensed and trained applicator we do only what's needed to gain control. Most people use more chemicals to clean their house then i ever would to treat for pests. Also, is it worth the risk to not treat properly and expose your family to west nile virus, malaria and dengue fever. And, don't forget, what we spray is the same chemical you apply to your dog and cat. Why would you not protect your family?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try this instead
https://www.gardensalive.com/product/its-time-to-trap-your-mosquitoes
Last year the whole block banded together to buy traps but we didn't notice a bit of difference. They were still terrible and the traps caught maybe a dozen all summer.
Would love to know treatment options. We have a basement entrance to our apartment and the lower patio area is significantly cooler and always has a visible swarm of mosquitoes and flies.
Don't build traps. The idea is to have the female mosquitoes lay their eggs in the water treated with BTI which prevents future adults from spawning, thus crashing the mosquito population. A trap just kills the one mosquito, but won't prevent the eggs already laid from spawning.
Didn't mention it but I also did that. We have a drain that always has standing water and I treat that with no success.
What do you mean by "no success"? No system will completely eliminate mosquitoes. The idea is to reduce the number of them in an area to make them less of a nuisance. Here is a recent study to help outline why attacking the larva is more effective than adults:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001706X18308106
By no success I mean we still had a large swarm of mosquitoes outside our door. I don't believe it reduced the number at all. Maybe it did produce fewer offspring but due to the conditions by our door (cool basement patio entrance) we are actually attracting mosquitoes there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try this instead
https://www.gardensalive.com/product/its-time-to-trap-your-mosquitoes
Last year the whole block banded together to buy traps but we didn't notice a bit of difference. They were still terrible and the traps caught maybe a dozen all summer.
Would love to know treatment options. We have a basement entrance to our apartment and the lower patio area is significantly cooler and always has a visible swarm of mosquitoes and flies.
Don't build traps. The idea is to have the female mosquitoes lay their eggs in the water treated with BTI which prevents future adults from spawning, thus crashing the mosquito population. A trap just kills the one mosquito, but won't prevent the eggs already laid from spawning.
Didn't mention it but I also did that. We have a drain that always has standing water and I treat that with no success.
What do you mean by "no success"? No system will completely eliminate mosquitoes. The idea is to reduce the number of them in an area to make them less of a nuisance. Here is a recent study to help outline why attacking the larva is more effective than adults:
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0001706X18308106
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try this instead
https://www.gardensalive.com/product/its-time-to-trap-your-mosquitoes
Last year the whole block banded together to buy traps but we didn't notice a bit of difference. They were still terrible and the traps caught maybe a dozen all summer.
Would love to know treatment options. We have a basement entrance to our apartment and the lower patio area is significantly cooler and always has a visible swarm of mosquitoes and flies.
Don't build traps. The idea is to have the female mosquitoes lay their eggs in the water treated with BTI which prevents future adults from spawning, thus crashing the mosquito population. A trap just kills the one mosquito, but won't prevent the eggs already laid from spawning.
Didn't mention it but I also did that. We have a drain that always has standing water and I treat that with no success.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try this instead
https://www.gardensalive.com/product/its-time-to-trap-your-mosquitoes
Last year the whole block banded together to buy traps but we didn't notice a bit of difference. They were still terrible and the traps caught maybe a dozen all summer.
Would love to know treatment options. We have a basement entrance to our apartment and the lower patio area is significantly cooler and always has a visible swarm of mosquitoes and flies.
Don't build traps. The idea is to have the female mosquitoes lay their eggs in the water treated with BTI which prevents future adults from spawning, thus crashing the mosquito population. A trap just kills the one mosquito, but won't prevent the eggs already laid from spawning.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Try this instead
https://www.gardensalive.com/product/its-time-to-trap-your-mosquitoes
Last year the whole block banded together to buy traps but we didn't notice a bit of difference. They were still terrible and the traps caught maybe a dozen all summer.
Would love to know treatment options. We have a basement entrance to our apartment and the lower patio area is significantly cooler and always has a visible swarm of mosquitoes and flies.
Anonymous wrote:Try this instead
https://www.gardensalive.com/product/its-time-to-trap-your-mosquitoes