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Ladybugs everwhere
Posted on 11/7/22 at 11:57 am
Posted on 11/7/22 at 11:57 am
Yesterday my entire house was covered with these things. They were all over my neighbors house as well. Sprayed everything with Talstar hoping to control them.
Now they are starting to get in the house through the tiniest creases in a couple windows/doors.
Any suggestions to contain these jerks?
Now they are starting to get in the house through the tiniest creases in a couple windows/doors.
Any suggestions to contain these jerks?
Posted on 11/7/22 at 12:02 pm to lilsnappa
they're really beneficial for controlling plant pests so try to avoid killing the ones outside
not sure what you can use once inside
not sure what you can use once inside
Posted on 11/7/22 at 12:17 pm to lilsnappa
Lady bugs or Asian beetles?
Posted on 11/7/22 at 1:13 pm to lilsnappa
probably asian beetles. iirc they tend to congregate on one side of a house (west maybe?). my old house would get swarms of them certain times of the year and they get inside too.
Posted on 11/7/22 at 1:31 pm to lilsnappa
quote:warm days in the spring/fall and a white house is recipe for beetle invasion.
Any suggestions to contain these jerks?
don't call them ladybugs. they're thug pieces of shite.
Posted on 11/7/22 at 3:02 pm to lilsnappa
quote:yes they can be a PIA but they are completely harmless and they eat aphids in your yard
The Asian Lady Beetle, Harmonia axyridis (Pallas), is relatively new to this country. The beetle is native to Asia (e.g., China, Russia, Korea, Japan), where it dwells in trees and fields, preying on aphids and scale insects. The first field populations in the United States were found in Louisiana in 1988. Since then the beetle has expanded its range to include much of the U.S. and parts of Canada. Earliest records in Kentucky date back to a few specimens collected in Hickman County in 1992.
During the 1960s to 1990s, the U.S. Department of Agriculture attempted to establish the Asian lady beetle to control agricultural pests, especially of pecans and apples. Large numbers of the beetles were released in several states including Georgia, South Carolina, Louisiana, Mississippi, California, Washington, Pennsylvania, Connecticut and Maryland. No such releases were ever attempted in Kentucky, and their occurrence here is probably due to northward migration from other southern states. Some scientists believe that current infestations in the U.S. originated not from these intentional releases, but from beetles accidentally transported into New Orleans on a freighter from Japan.
live and let live brah. the pesticide you sprayed everywhere is more of a threat to you than the bugs
Posted on 11/8/22 at 7:58 am to lilsnappa
Not lady bugs. Asian beetles.
If they get in your house...get some pantyhose and put it over a vacuum cleaner tube and suck them up. Throw panty hose away with bugs trapped inside.
I've heard rumors the aroma they give off when they die/are killed actually attracts more. Just a rumor.
If they get in your house...get some pantyhose and put it over a vacuum cleaner tube and suck them up. Throw panty hose away with bugs trapped inside.
I've heard rumors the aroma they give off when they die/are killed actually attracts more. Just a rumor.
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