Tips categories
Articles with planet-saving tips to help protect the environment we all affect!
Green News Blog
Environmental stories, opinion pieces and site news
 
Article Options

Popular Articles
  1. Brown rice vs white rice
  2. Hydrogen peroxide tips
  3. White bread vs brown bread
  4. White sugar vs raw sugar
  5. 24 handy lemon tips
  6. 30 baking soda tips
  7. Dealing with dog poop
  8. Versatile vinegar tips
  9. Baking soda introduction
  10. Hemp facts
No popular articles found.
Get involved!
Feel free to add comments to tips and blog posts & build on the information or click here to submit new earth friendly tips and environmental news items!
 »  Home  »  pets  »  Ant deterrent tips
Ant deterrent tips
By Green Living Tips | Published  04/21/2008 | pets , home , garden , business
Deterring and dealing with ants

I love to watch ants go about their business. They perform an important role in the environment, cleaning up dead insects and animals and aerating the soil. They aren't so adorable when they infest our houses though!

Usually we reach for insecticide when ants become a problem; but there are more environmentally friendly ways of deterring ants.

After a question from a reader about this, I dug back through the articles I have already published and found a few tips, but I also put the question to readers of my newsletter - and received a stack of great tried and tested ideas! I'd like to thank the following readers who contributed:

Cheryl, Elizabeth, Christine, Debbie D., Bonnie G, Becky K. Susan G., Stephanie H., Charlotte, Kathern T., Dan L., Jess A., Melissa B. and Kel.

Ant deterrent tips

Here's some things you may want to try before reaching for that can of insecticide, depending on the application:

- Pouring lemon juice around areas ants frequent.

- Sprinkle cinnamon or place in cheesecloth bags in affected areas. Cinnamon was a very popular choice with quite a few readers reporting it being highly effective.

- Baking soda can deter ants - pour a solid line in areas of activity and they won't cross it.

- A ring of coffee grounds around sensitive plants can discourage ants.

- A puree blend of orange peel and water can be applied to an area to discourage ants from crossing.

- Ants hate vinegar; so spray it around doorways and other areas they frequent to repel them. A small container of vinegar mixed with honey placed in affected areas appears to do the trick too.

- A reader reported baby powder stopped them dead in their tracks.

- Pouring boiling water over their tracks (destroys the scent trail)

- Sprinkling a circle of ground cloves around the pet food bowls

- Removing rocks and wood from around the garden

- Planting mint around vegetable patches, flower beds and around the house

- Quite a few readers found cinnamon sprinkled across ant scent trails to be very effective

- Citrus oil is a good deterrent; it can soaked into a piece of string and place around scent trails.

- Use a piece of chalk to draw a line over trails - again, the ants won't cross it. Chalk also has the advantage of being able to be used on vertical surfaces

One enterprising reader decided to work with the ants rather than against them. She made a sugar trail away from the house to her compost pile and put out the intent that they would find a greater feast there.  It worked!

Ants invade for a reason - usually for food or water, so be sure to keep food items well secured and clean up after you prepare food. Also check plumbing for leaks, particularly under sinks. Dead insects can attract large numbers of ants, so check window sills and other areas where they may accumulate.

Ant eradication tips

Unfortunately, some times you'll need to eradicate the ants rather than deter them. A couple of greener ways to do it:

A mixture of 1/8 teaspoon of powdered borax and sugar or honey will attract and kill ants. This is a mixture that is often used in commercial ant-specific products. Worker ants take it back to the nest and pass it onto other ants, killing the colony. While borax in small quantities is relatively harmless to larger animals, in big enough doses it can kill, so be cautious about placement and keep out of reach of pets and children.

A reader reported using dry grits to kill ants; a non-toxic strategy she's used with success for 20 years. The theory behind it is that the ants eat the grits and when they drink water the grits expand in their stomachs, killing them.

Hopefully one of the above tips will help you in your environmentally friendly control of ants! If you have any other tips, please add them below.


 
Michael Bloch
Green Living Tips.com
Article reproduction guidelines
Comments
  • Comment #1 (Posted by Wendy)

    Thanks for all the great ideas! Im trying the baking soda now and it seems to be doing the job!
     
  • Comment #2 (Posted by jake3988)

    That ever awesome baking soda. Is there anything it can't do? :)

    I live in the basement of a 150 year old house and ants are beginning to be a MAJOR problem now that spring has sprung.

    Thanks for all the tips!

    After I try them I'll try and report which ones seem to work the best for me.
     
  • Comment #3 (Posted by Stephanie)

    Scarily enough, I've also heard of using Splenda to kill ants!
     
  • Comment #4 (Posted by Michael - Green Living Tips)

    Wendy, that's great to hear! Jake, yes, please do - your feedback would be appreciated. Stephanie - artificial sweeteners as pesticides - that doesn't sound too far fetched actually :)
     
Submit Comment (reviewed before publishing)