Argentine ants (Photo: Alex Wild). |
So let’s run through what might be a typical scenario:
You look around and rule out the presence of a leak or other plumbing issue. You determine that the ants are just after whatever water is in the sink. You spend some timing looking around, but because the ants haven’t established a foraging trail, you can’t figure out how they are getting in.
So you do what you can in this situation – perhaps you make a crack-and-crevice application into any obvious cracks or gaps in an effort to keep the ants out. You recommend that your customer seal up the couple of gaps you found with some caulk or other sealant. You go through your regular spiel about making sure that food is stored properly, garbage is taken out regularly, excess water is wiped up, etc. And you’re done.
Until you get another call about ants from the same account! So, you go back, look around again – this time taking even a little more time to check for potential entry points. You know that for optimal results, you really need to find and treat the source (i.e., the nest). So you go outside and look for a nearby ant nest but find nothing. You watch the ants closely, but never see where they are coming from or going to. So you make another, more thorough crack-and-crevice application into the gaps in the area. You treat a few extra openings that you somehow missed before. And you’re done.
You wish! You get yet another call from the same customer complaining about ants in the same area. So, what can you do now? What is going on?
Well, I can tell you that I’ve had this exact same problem occur at my house – in my kitchen around the sink. And I tried everything that I wrote about above. I checked outside for a nearby nest but found nothing. Since I could find no nest, I realized that my best bet would be to attempt to keep the ants out of my house. So I treated all the obvious gaps with a crack-and-crevice insecticidal spray. I sealed up whatever openings I could see. Yet, I kept getting ants around my kitchen sink. I watched the ants carefully to try and determine exactly where they were getting in. But I could find nothing, because while there were several ants around the sink, there was never a real distinct foraging trail.
Ants recruited and feeding on jelly (Photo: Patty Alder) |
Then it hit me: I realized that in order to find the entry point(s), I needed a distinct foraging trail. So I placed a very small dab of apple jelly on a piece of cardboard, placed it on the counter near the ants…. and waited. It didn’t take long – maybe 20 minutes or so – for more ants to show up (see photo at right).
Foraging trail can be followed from the jelly down the window frame (Photo: Patty Alder). |
Check for a trail of foraging ants and carefully follow the ants to see if you can determine how they are gaining entry into the area. If jelly does not seem to attract the ants, you could try a small piece of cheese or a potato chip. Once you figure out where the ants are coming in, you can treat that opening with a crack-and-crevice application. You may even want to suggest your customer seal up the opening after it has been treated.
Good luck and happy ant hunting!
Good luck and happy ant hunting!
I will say, ants continue to find ways to impress me with how they can dig and burrow through just about anything. they always pop up in my kitchen pantry (obviously searching for food), and no matter how many times I call ant control services, they find a way 2 or 3 months later haha!
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