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#1
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fruit fly infestation
Hey Y'all!
Does anyone have any tips on how to get rid of fruit flies? The kids and I were gone for the weekend and left the hubby at home to tend to the farm. While we were gone he decided to cut open a watermelon and then left half of it out on the table. When we got home the fruit flies had taken over the kitchen! How disgusting! I've tried everything I can think of to get rid of them, but they just seem to be getting worse! Please keep in mind that I much prefer chemical free remedies. Thanks! ~Rae |
#2
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fruit fly infestation
In article , rachael simpson
wrote: Hey Y'all! Does anyone have any tips on how to get rid of fruit flies? The kids and I were gone for the weekend and left the hubby at home to tend to the farm. While we were gone he decided to cut open a watermelon and then left half of it out on the table. When we got home the fruit flies had taken over the kitchen! How disgusting! I've tried everything I can think of to get rid of them, but they just seem to be getting worse! Please keep in mind that I much prefer chemical free remedies. Thanks! ~Rae The main thing is to stop feeding them. Keep all table surfaces scrupulously clean. Don't leave wet dog or catfood out. Clean out the sink drains with bleach. Take the trash out a couple times a day; if you use an indoor trash can sterilze the interior bottom. Keep fruit in tightly sealing freezer-baggies or rubbermaid lidded containers. Don't keep any flower bouquets for a while. If you have a potato bin, move the taters to a sealable can for a while. Keep all the fruit in the refrigerator for the time being. They only live a couple days, so unless you're still providing a medium for them to reproduce, they should be gone quite soon. Baited fruitfly traps are available at the hardware store but I've never needed them. Whenever I've had an outbreak of fruitflies the cause was obvious, either not wiping up well after cutting fruits, or not doing the dishes often enough, it's usually pretty easy to figure out and quickly repairable. You can make a trap with a jar, put a quarter-inch of red wine in the jar, and tape a funnel for a lid pointed down. The flies find their way in easily, but not so easily out, and drown in the wine instead of making maggots. Alternatively, use a paper cup with banana chunk or banana skin or grossly overripe nectarine in the bottom, make a paper cone to fit over the top. When the cup is full of flies, wrap it in a baggy and toss it in the outdoor trash. Repeat until flies are gone. Best baits have a bit of mold or nasty stuff on them as the fruitflies don't actually go for the fruit, they go for live yeast growing on rotting fruit. Since they started on the watermelon you can be pretty sure what they are, but sometimes what seems to be fruitflies turns out to be some other tiny fly and what gets rid of fruitflies won't work; they won't go away until you figure out which indoor flower pot they're breeding either in the potting soil or on some houseplant. -paghat the ratgirl -- visit my temperate gardening website: http://www.paghat.com visit my film reviews website: http://www.weirdwildrealm.com |
#3
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fruit fly infestation
paghat wrote:
In article , rachael simpson wrote: Snip The main thing is to stop feeding them. Keep all table surfaces scrupulously clean. Don't leave wet dog or catfood out. Clean out the sink drains with bleach. Take the trash out a couple times a day; if you use an indoor trash can sterilze the interior bottom. Keep fruit in tightly sealing freezer-baggies or rubbermaid lidded containers. Don't keep any flower bouquets for a while. If you have a potato bin, move the taters to a sealable can for a while. Keep all the fruit in the refrigerator for the time being. They only live a couple days, so unless you're still providing a medium for them to reproduce, they should be gone quite soon. Baited fruitfly traps are available at the hardware store but I've never needed them. Whenever I've had an outbreak of fruitflies the cause was obvious, either not wiping up well after cutting fruits, or not doing the dishes often enough, it's usually pretty easy to figure out and quickly repairable. You can make a trap with a jar, put a quarter-inch of red wine in the jar, and tape a funnel for a lid pointed down. The flies find their way in easily, but not so easily out, and drown in the wine instead of making maggots. Alternatively, use a paper cup with banana chunk or banana skin or grossly overripe nectarine in the bottom, make a paper cone to fit over the top. When the cup is full of flies, wrap it in a baggy and toss it in the outdoor trash. Repeat until flies are gone. Best baits have a bit of mold or nasty stuff on them as the fruitflies don't actually go for the fruit, they go for live yeast growing on rotting fruit. Since they started on the watermelon you can be pretty sure what they are, but sometimes what seems to be fruitflies turns out to be some other tiny fly and what gets rid of fruitflies won't work; they won't go away until you figure out which indoor flower pot they're breeding either in the potting soil or on some houseplant. -paghat the ratgirl Thanks for the trap idea. I'll give it a try. We don't have indoor pets and all the feed for the livestock stays in the barn! lol! I've cleaned the drains several times since returning home and generally try to keep the table clear of the kids "stickinesses". The only thing potato bin wise is what I keep my onions in. The taters are all in the storage shed outside. No indoor plants here either as I figure they wouldn't fare so well with two toddlers. I've tried sticky fly traps ( the kind that hang from the ceiling...we generally keep some placed around the barn) and also have kept a dish of cider vinegar out in hopes that would attract them. Between the sticky paper traps and vinegar, we caught quite a few, but it still doesn't seem to have put a dent in them. I have to do some grocery shopping tomorrow, so I'll try to pick up some red wine then...unless you think using the vinegar with a top that way might would work also? ~Rae |
#4
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fruit fly infestation
In article ,
rachael simpson wrote: paghat wrote: In article , rachael simpson wrote: Snip The main thing is to stop feeding them. Keep all table surfaces scrupulously clean. Don't leave wet dog or catfood out. Clean out the sink drains with bleach. Take the trash out a couple times a day; if you use an indoor trash can sterilze the interior bottom. Keep fruit in tightly sealing freezer-baggies or rubbermaid lidded containers. Don't keep any flower bouquets for a while. If you have a potato bin, move the taters to a sealable can for a while. Keep all the fruit in the refrigerator for the time being. They only live a couple days, so unless you're still providing a medium for them to reproduce, they should be gone quite soon. Baited fruitfly traps are available at the hardware store but I've never needed them. Whenever I've had an outbreak of fruitflies the cause was obvious, either not wiping up well after cutting fruits, or not doing the dishes often enough, it's usually pretty easy to figure out and quickly repairable. You can make a trap with a jar, put a quarter-inch of red wine in the jar, and tape a funnel for a lid pointed down. The flies find their way in easily, but not so easily out, and drown in the wine instead of making maggots. Alternatively, use a paper cup with banana chunk or banana skin or grossly overripe nectarine in the bottom, make a paper cone to fit over the top. When the cup is full of flies, wrap it in a baggy and toss it in the outdoor trash. Repeat until flies are gone. Best baits have a bit of mold or nasty stuff on them as the fruitflies don't actually go for the fruit, they go for live yeast growing on rotting fruit. Since they started on the watermelon you can be pretty sure what they are, but sometimes what seems to be fruitflies turns out to be some other tiny fly and what gets rid of fruitflies won't work; they won't go away until you figure out which indoor flower pot they're breeding either in the potting soil or on some houseplant. -paghat the ratgirl Thanks for the trap idea. I'll give it a try. We don't have indoor pets and all the feed for the livestock stays in the barn! lol! I've cleaned the drains several times since returning home and generally try to keep the table clear of the kids "stickinesses". The only thing potato bin wise is what I keep my onions in. The taters are all in the storage shed outside. No indoor plants here either as I figure they wouldn't fare so well with two toddlers. I've tried sticky fly traps ( the kind that hang from the ceiling...we generally keep some placed around the barn) and also have kept a dish of cider vinegar out in hopes that would attract them. Between the sticky paper traps and vinegar, we caught quite a few, but it still doesn't seem to have put a dent in them. I have to do some grocery shopping tomorrow, so I'll try to pick up some red wine then...unless you think using the vinegar with a top that way might would work also? ~Rae You can reduce their numbers but until you have a frost, you are gong to be in a constant battle. They are probably being attracted by ripe fruit outside. -- Billy Bush and Pelosi Behind Bars http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9KVTf...ef=patrick.net http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1009916.html |
#5
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fruit fly infestation
Billy wrote:
Snip You can reduce their numbers but until you have a frost, you are gong to be in a constant battle. They are probably being attracted by ripe fruit outside. Gee, thanks, Billy....you just made my day. Just what I wanted to hear...err...read! *shakes head* lol! ~Rae |
#6
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fruit fly infestation
On Aug 14, 9:50*pm, rachael simpson
wrote: Hey Y'all! Does anyone have any tips on how to get rid of fruit flies? The kids and I were gone for the weekend and left the hubby at home to tend to the farm. While we were gone he decided to cut open a watermelon and then left half of it out on the table. When we got home the fruit flies had taken over the kitchen! How disgusting! I've tried everything I can think of to get rid of them, but they just seem to be getting worse! Please keep in mind that I much prefer chemical free remedies. Thanks! ~Rae I received the following advice in an email recently: To get rid of pesky fruit flies, take a small glass, fill it 1/2" with Apple Cider Vinegar and 2 drops of dish washing liquid; mix well. You will find those flies drawn to the cup and gone forever! I don't know if it works, but good luck! |
#7
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fruit fly infestation
In article ,
rachael simpson wrote: Billy wrote: Snip You can reduce their numbers but until you have a frost, you are gong to be in a constant battle. They are probably being attracted by ripe fruit outside. Gee, thanks, Billy....you just made my day. Just what I wanted to hear...err...read! *shakes head* lol! ~Rae Vinegar is real cheap. Guess you could scale up the trap design in the URL below. Bill http://www.ca.uky.edu/entomology/entfacts/ef621.asp -- Garden in shade zone 5 S Jersey USA |
#8
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fruit fly infestation
In article , rachael simpson
wrote: Billy wrote: Snip You can reduce their numbers but until you have a frost, you are gong to be in a constant battle. They are probably being attracted by ripe fruit outside. Gee, thanks, Billy....you just made my day. Just what I wanted to hear...err...read! *shakes head* lol! ~Rae Well, things vary. I had fruitflies last week, thick as the devil, mainly because I hadn't put the lid on the compost bucket properly plus our stash of subscribed organic fruit had some bad bits in it. All I did was pay better attention to the bucket, refrigerate the fruit rather than leave it out, throw out some pretty frazzled flower bouquets that had the requisite yeast growing at the waterline, and oh yeah did the dishes a lot which I hate to do. Today there's not a fruitfly anywhere. Oh, they WILL come back before summer's through, but when they do, it'll be because of a bad banana or the compost bucket lid not pressed tight, not because there's fruit out of doors. Here they just don't come inside without the scent of a breeding ground; one generally has to BRING them inside (like on the subcribed organic fruit). We had a worm bin right next to the back door, left the back door open so Daigoro could come and go into the enclosed yard, and the worm bin did get some fruitflies in it but they never came indoors. -paghat the ratgirl -- visit my temperate gardening website: http://www.paghat.com visit my film reviews website: http://www.weirdwildrealm.com |
#9
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fruit fly infestation~update
Bought a couple of baited fly traps and made a few of my own as well.
Between the all the "traps" the fruit fly numbers have diminished greatly. Thanks for the tips and ideas! ~Rae |
#10
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fruit fly infestation
On Thu, 14 Aug 2008 21:50:16 -0400, rachael simpson
wrote: Hey Y'all! Does anyone have any tips on how to get rid of fruit flies? The kids and I were gone for the weekend and left the hubby at home to tend to the farm. While we were gone he decided to cut open a watermelon and then left half of it out on the table. When we got home the fruit flies had taken over the kitchen! How disgusting! I've tried everything I can think of to get rid of them, but they just seem to be getting worse! Please keep in mind that I much prefer chemical free remedies. Thanks! ~Rae Remove all food sources. The flies will die within a week then clean the window sills. Don't kill the spiders, at least not yet. |
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