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How to Get Rid of Ladybugs
Children love it when a lady bug lands on them, for then they can recite the age-old rhyme, “Lady bug, lady bug, fly away home…" Serious gardeners also love lady bugs, purchasing them and setting them free to eat other bugs in their garden and hoping that they stick around instead of “flying away home." A single ladybug is capable of consuming 50 to 60 aphids per day and eats a variety of other insects and larvae. (If you're fond of these little insects, learn how to make a lady bug)
Getting Rid of Ladybugs
That said, a lady bug problem has developed in America. Companies who raise and sell lady bugs to gardeners and farmers began some years back importing them from Asia. The foreigners are supposedly more voracious than our domestic variety. Our lady bugs die off in the winter; foreign lady bugs hibernate, problematically in people’s houses. They would prefer rocks and caves, but they don’t always have them available.
These lady bugs seek out structures with an abundance of cracks and crevices which they can use to gain entrance. Homes with cedar shakes or other wood siding, older houses, and houses painted a light color seem to be more vulnerable. The pheromones they excrete while in your home attract more bugs that mass over a period of years and become unbearable when they start overflowing from the crevices and the attic into living spaces. Although they do not destroy anything in the home or pose economic problems, get enough of them and they will be buzzing around your lamps, landing on you, and beginning to bite; food is scarce for these bugs during the winter months, so they are known to randomly bite things in an effort to find sustenance.
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Amy (below) didnt read the article at all. It specifically said Do not catch them inside your house then set them free in your garden or you will have the same exact problem later. Although they can be a good thing for your garden if you are having issues w/your house being overrun w/ladybugs the whole idea is to get them as far from your house as possible. Not Keep them around… dont ya think?
Ok down to more practical advice. Most the others are all good,some may work better than others depending on your home & how bad the prob is. In our case we tried the lemon candles & wiping down w/ammonia. It worked a little(we think), but between using a vaccum cleaner & the cypermethrin chemicle (we didn’t want to use chemicals but you do whatever you need to, people were starting to think we had ladybug wallpaper it got so bad). That chemical spray & vaccum seemed to do the trick. Good luck.
circus and vacuum cleaners. I helps when you place citrus on windows, doors, corners, etc. Ladybugs can not escape vaccums. Also, make sure, when you’re trying to get them out of a certain room, turn on the brightest light on iin your home. Ironicly, bugs like the darkest places with is behind the brightest lights.
ladybug are great gather them and throw them in the graden
do not use benzophenone, it is a hazardous chemical. my house is infested with ladybugs, but I sure wouldnt use a chemical that will harm the respitory tract, its a pretty nasty chemical. just as bad as all the other **** they have you thinking is great.
The Ingredient Benzophenone gets rid of them I have a friend who did that and she never saw anotherladybug.
Ok so first you have to get rid of the bugs you have already. A vaccuum works great. Then take a squirt bottle and fill it half way with lemon cleaner and the rest of the way with hot water. Then go to town spraying the inside/outside of all doors. It might not keep all of the bugs out but 95% of bugs gone isn’t bad.
The foreign ladybugs that come inside for the winter do not like the wonderful scent of cloves! I saw a tip somewhere that suggested placing whole cloves around windows and doors, and even in larger light fixtures. It works! I put little caps, like from water bottles, full of cloves between the window and storm window, between the storm door and the main door, and in the rim of the big kitchen fluorescent light. No more ladybugs overwintering in my house!