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2012年9月17日 星期一

The End of Summer Means Pest Control Adjustments For Year-Round Insects and a New Rodent Attack


Most of those insects that pester us during the hot summer days are snug in their winter homes here in the Midwest. I noticed a couple fruit flies buzzing around over the last few days, but I know they'll disappear soon enough.

That doesn't mean freedom from your pest control efforts though. You just need a change to pest control tactics that battle the cold weather visitors you don't want invading your home.

Pest control requires your attention 12-months every year, not just when it's warm.

You still must watch out for a couple of insects that stay active no matter what the season, though they slow down their activities when they're cold. Then there's that little 4-legged guy, and his bigger cousin, that likes the warmth you make available when the out-of-doors atmosphere loses its comfort.

Beyond your usual inspection for cockroaches and spiders, cold weather means an additional pest control procedure for checking along your walls (especially in the corners) for those little calling cards that alert you to the arrival of the rodents.

Most spiders don't bother you except for the unsightly cobwebs they weave in the upper corners of the walls. Use a broom for that, it works well for handling cobwebs.

I see the population of brown recluse spiders constantly growing around my place here in Indiana. Every year I find more of them in my house, and in my storage barn. I advise you study some pictures of these highly poisonous spiders until you know what they look like from a distance. You don't want to get to close to these guys.

Once you recognize them at a glance from three feet or so just spray them with an insecticide. You must constantly be on the watch for them all 12-months of the year. Those sprays only last so long, and once the potency disappears new brown recluse move right back in.

At least that's my experience.

Cockroaches make their home in your walls, venture out mostly after the house is dark, and then usually only visit the inside spaces of your cabinets where they find food, or under your sinks, running along pipes where they get their drinking water.

Most of the time you won't even see these guys because they're shy and don't venture out into open spaces much. When you do see them they're usually in the kitchen roaming around your floors and countertops. Spotting roaches is often a middle-of-the-night thing when you walk into your kitchen, and suddenly turn on the light - and they all go scurrying for cover. Sometimes you find them before lighting up the room when you step down and feel them crunching under your foot.

When the population grows to the size that you see them running around in the open is when you know you have a large infestation of cockroaches. By then your job of eliminating them is difficult.

The variety of roach that infests your kitchen is most likely the German cockroach, and your best method for treating is bait placement.

Then there's that rodent I mentioned.

These pests don't venture out into the open much either. Sometimes you catch movement from the corner of your eye, and maybe catch sight of a mouse running along a wall. Most times you don't see them, but you know they're around because you find those droppings every day.

Rodents like to stay out of sight when they have the opportunity. They rarely run out into the middle of a room.

Cardboard tunnels with glue boards placed inside make great traps for mice and rats. They think the tunnel is wonderful place to hide, and become stuck on the glue. Mechanical traps capture rodents successfully when you place something tasty on the trigger.

Rodent baits are most effective for mice and rats. The problem with placing baits is the rodent eats the bait then crawls inside your wall to die. That means you live with a stink that lasts three or four days for most decaying mice, and one to two weeks for dead rats.

With awareness that new seasonal pests have different habits you'll still be in control. Just make those pest control inspection changes to address those new habits, and you'll keep the populations down.

Pest control is a process that requires your attention all year. Don't let your guard down just because the weather turns cold.




Joseph Jackson is an experienced pest control technician and author of RODENT RIDDANCE, a how to guide for performing do-it-yourself pest control for controlling mice and rats.

If you're looking for more do-it-yourself pest control techniques you'll find Joe's book that covers all his most problematic Pest Control Technician experiences at: BUG RIDDANCE, Rats And Mice Too!





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

2012年9月8日 星期六

Attack Fear Panic Symptom


As a child I was so afraid of spiders that I had to leave or was unable to enter a room where I saw one. I grew out my phobia of spiders as I grew up, but I was bitten by a Brown Recluse spider several years ago. It made me really sick for a few hours, and paralysis set in my arm and hand, after a few days, but after a round of antibiotics, I was OK...until I saw another one in my bathroom! I freaked out so badly that I began screaming, and was so paralyzed by fear that I couldn't move. Fortunately for me, my roomy had no such phobia, and after coaxing me out of the bathroom, took care of the spider.

I no longer fear spiders and don't even bother killing it if I see one in my house. Then, the other night, I felt a tingling sensation on the side of my leg, as if an insect was crawling on me. I looked, but nothing was there. The tingling stopped, then started again a few seconds later, and this time, the old familiar fear that it was a spider crawling on me rose up inside me, and a few seconds later, I panicked and began fighting off invisible spiders!

I had a phobia of spiders as a kid, and I've also had many panic attacks as an adult. Given the two scenarios above, which was a reaction to fear, and which was a panic attack reaction?

The answer is C. All of the above!

In the Brown Recluse episode, I had a valid reason to be afraid of the spider in the bathroom, and that fear triggered a panic attack. In the latter episode, the tingling was the onset of an untriggered panic attack exacerbated by an old phobia. The fear fed the panic, the panic fed the fear, and next thing I knew, I was waging war on invisible spiders! OK, so I didn't freak out that badly, but I could have if I didn't know how to prevent panic attacks.

Anxiety is rooted in fear; that's why panic attacks often start with a sudden sense of fear or unease. Then you may develop one or more other symptoms, such as blurred vision or lightheadedness. Panic kicks in when fear begins to control you, and they lead you on their merry dance down the Nightmare Path.

Do you think I'm too blithe about panic attacks to ever have had one? You're wrong. I've had such severe, untriggered panic attacks that I rolled my car, lost a husband, and had so many mind-blanking, sobbing-in-front-of-the-computer-monitor episodes that I could no longer work in a public setting.

Since I've been working from my home, though, I've learned a few things about how fear and panic attacks affect me, and with the help of learning correct breathing techniques, relaxation exercises and a few other helpful things, I'm now able to recognize the first symptoms of untriggered panic attacks and use the techniques to avoid having an attack. In fact, I found the answer to breaking the fear/panic cycle online!

Now, I'm able to work amongst other people, but I enjoy my online job so much, that I don't see why I should waste my gas money and time on two thirty-minute one-way commutes, to a job where I have a boss and earn 35 - 40% less! If I did that, I really would be crazy! And spiders? Live and let live!




Did you know that every 8 seconds someone in the US has a panic attack? True! And sometimes I'm one of them! How about you?

I've had panic attacks that have lasted 30+ minutes, and was absolutely certain I was having a heart attack! I couldn't breathe, I had chest and neck pains, my left arm hurt, yet at the same time was numb; how weird is that?. Although I still feel the symptoms of panic attack coming on, from time to time, I've learned how to take control of my thoughts and reactions, and have changed my lifestyle to drastically decrease the chances of panic attack.

Click Here To find out Step-By-Step how I took control of my Anxiety and Finally Ended My Panic Attacks.





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

2012年5月17日 星期四

The End of Summer Means Pest Control Adjustments For Year-Round Insects and a New Rodent Attack


Most of those insects that pester us during the hot summer days are snug in their winter homes here in the Midwest. I noticed a couple fruit flies buzzing around over the last few days, but I know they'll disappear soon enough.

That doesn't mean freedom from your pest control efforts though. You just need a change to pest control tactics that battle the cold weather visitors you don't want invading your home.

Pest control requires your attention 12-months every year, not just when it's warm.

You still must watch out for a couple of insects that stay active no matter what the season, though they slow down their activities when they're cold. Then there's that little 4-legged guy, and his bigger cousin, that likes the warmth you make available when the out-of-doors atmosphere loses its comfort.

Beyond your usual inspection for cockroaches and spiders, cold weather means an additional pest control procedure for checking along your walls (especially in the corners) for those little calling cards that alert you to the arrival of the rodents.

Most spiders don't bother you except for the unsightly cobwebs they weave in the upper corners of the walls. Use a broom for that, it works well for handling cobwebs.

I see the population of brown recluse spiders constantly growing around my place here in Indiana. Every year I find more of them in my house, and in my storage barn. I advise you study some pictures of these highly poisonous spiders until you know what they look like from a distance. You don't want to get to close to these guys.

Once you recognize them at a glance from three feet or so just spray them with an insecticide. You must constantly be on the watch for them all 12-months of the year. Those sprays only last so long, and once the potency disappears new brown recluse move right back in.

At least that's my experience.

Cockroaches make their home in your walls, venture out mostly after the house is dark, and then usually only visit the inside spaces of your cabinets where they find food, or under your sinks, running along pipes where they get their drinking water.

Most of the time you won't even see these guys because they're shy and don't venture out into open spaces much. When you do see them they're usually in the kitchen roaming around your floors and countertops. Spotting roaches is often a middle-of-the-night thing when you walk into your kitchen, and suddenly turn on the light - and they all go scurrying for cover. Sometimes you find them before lighting up the room when you step down and feel them crunching under your foot.

When the population grows to the size that you see them running around in the open is when you know you have a large infestation of cockroaches. By then your job of eliminating them is difficult.

The variety of roach that infests your kitchen is most likely the German cockroach, and your best method for treating is bait placement.

Then there's that rodent I mentioned.

These pests don't venture out into the open much either. Sometimes you catch movement from the corner of your eye, and maybe catch sight of a mouse running along a wall. Most times you don't see them, but you know they're around because you find those droppings every day.

Rodents like to stay out of sight when they have the opportunity. They rarely run out into the middle of a room.

Cardboard tunnels with glue boards placed inside make great traps for mice and rats. They think the tunnel is wonderful place to hide, and become stuck on the glue. Mechanical traps capture rodents successfully when you place something tasty on the trigger.

Rodent baits are most effective for mice and rats. The problem with placing baits is the rodent eats the bait then crawls inside your wall to die. That means you live with a stink that lasts three or four days for most decaying mice, and one to two weeks for dead rats.

With awareness that new seasonal pests have different habits you'll still be in control. Just make those pest control inspection changes to address those new habits, and you'll keep the populations down.

Pest control is a process that requires your attention all year. Don't let your guard down just because the weather turns cold.




Joseph Jackson is an experienced pest control technician and author of RODENT RIDDANCE, a how to guide for performing do-it-yourself pest control for controlling mice and rats.

If you're looking for more do-it-yourself pest control techniques you'll find Joe's book that covers all his most problematic Pest Control Technician experiences at: BUG RIDDANCE, Rats And Mice Too!





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

2012年5月11日 星期五

Attack Fear Panic Symptom


As a child I was so afraid of spiders that I had to leave or was unable to enter a room where I saw one. I grew out my phobia of spiders as I grew up, but I was bitten by a Brown Recluse spider several years ago. It made me really sick for a few hours, and paralysis set in my arm and hand, after a few days, but after a round of antibiotics, I was OK...until I saw another one in my bathroom! I freaked out so badly that I began screaming, and was so paralyzed by fear that I couldn't move. Fortunately for me, my roomy had no such phobia, and after coaxing me out of the bathroom, took care of the spider.

I no longer fear spiders and don't even bother killing it if I see one in my house. Then, the other night, I felt a tingling sensation on the side of my leg, as if an insect was crawling on me. I looked, but nothing was there. The tingling stopped, then started again a few seconds later, and this time, the old familiar fear that it was a spider crawling on me rose up inside me, and a few seconds later, I panicked and began fighting off invisible spiders!

I had a phobia of spiders as a kid, and I've also had many panic attacks as an adult. Given the two scenarios above, which was a reaction to fear, and which was a panic attack reaction?

The answer is C. All of the above!

In the Brown Recluse episode, I had a valid reason to be afraid of the spider in the bathroom, and that fear triggered a panic attack. In the latter episode, the tingling was the onset of an untriggered panic attack exacerbated by an old phobia. The fear fed the panic, the panic fed the fear, and next thing I knew, I was waging war on invisible spiders! OK, so I didn't freak out that badly, but I could have if I didn't know how to prevent panic attacks.

Anxiety is rooted in fear; that's why panic attacks often start with a sudden sense of fear or unease. Then you may develop one or more other symptoms, such as blurred vision or lightheadedness. Panic kicks in when fear begins to control you, and they lead you on their merry dance down the Nightmare Path.

Do you think I'm too blithe about panic attacks to ever have had one? You're wrong. I've had such severe, untriggered panic attacks that I rolled my car, lost a husband, and had so many mind-blanking, sobbing-in-front-of-the-computer-monitor episodes that I could no longer work in a public setting.

Since I've been working from my home, though, I've learned a few things about how fear and panic attacks affect me, and with the help of learning correct breathing techniques, relaxation exercises and a few other helpful things, I'm now able to recognize the first symptoms of untriggered panic attacks and use the techniques to avoid having an attack. In fact, I found the answer to breaking the fear/panic cycle online!

Now, I'm able to work amongst other people, but I enjoy my online job so much, that I don't see why I should waste my gas money and time on two thirty-minute one-way commutes, to a job where I have a boss and earn 35 - 40% less! If I did that, I really would be crazy! And spiders? Live and let live!




Did you know that every 8 seconds someone in the US has a panic attack? True! And sometimes I'm one of them! How about you?

I've had panic attacks that have lasted 30+ minutes, and was absolutely certain I was having a heart attack! I couldn't breathe, I had chest and neck pains, my left arm hurt, yet at the same time was numb; how weird is that?. Although I still feel the symptoms of panic attack coming on, from time to time, I've learned how to take control of my thoughts and reactions, and have changed my lifestyle to drastically decrease the chances of panic attack.

Click Here To find out Step-By-Step how I took control of my Anxiety and Finally Ended My Panic Attacks.





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

2012年1月29日 星期日

Attack Fear Panic Symptom


As a child I was so afraid of spiders that I had to leave or was unable to enter a room where I saw one. I grew out my phobia of spiders as I grew up, but I was bitten by a Brown Recluse spider several years ago. It made me really sick for a few hours, and paralysis set in my arm and hand, after a few days, but after a round of antibiotics, I was OK...until I saw another one in my bathroom! I freaked out so badly that I began screaming, and was so paralyzed by fear that I couldn't move. Fortunately for me, my roomy had no such phobia, and after coaxing me out of the bathroom, took care of the spider.

I no longer fear spiders and don't even bother killing it if I see one in my house. Then, the other night, I felt a tingling sensation on the side of my leg, as if an insect was crawling on me. I looked, but nothing was there. The tingling stopped, then started again a few seconds later, and this time, the old familiar fear that it was a spider crawling on me rose up inside me, and a few seconds later, I panicked and began fighting off invisible spiders!

I had a phobia of spiders as a kid, and I've also had many panic attacks as an adult. Given the two scenarios above, which was a reaction to fear, and which was a panic attack reaction?

The answer is C. All of the above!

In the Brown Recluse episode, I had a valid reason to be afraid of the spider in the bathroom, and that fear triggered a panic attack. In the latter episode, the tingling was the onset of an untriggered panic attack exacerbated by an old phobia. The fear fed the panic, the panic fed the fear, and next thing I knew, I was waging war on invisible spiders! OK, so I didn't freak out that badly, but I could have if I didn't know how to prevent panic attacks.

Anxiety is rooted in fear; that's why panic attacks often start with a sudden sense of fear or unease. Then you may develop one or more other symptoms, such as blurred vision or lightheadedness. Panic kicks in when fear begins to control you, and they lead you on their merry dance down the Nightmare Path.

Do you think I'm too blithe about panic attacks to ever have had one? You're wrong. I've had such severe, untriggered panic attacks that I rolled my car, lost a husband, and had so many mind-blanking, sobbing-in-front-of-the-computer-monitor episodes that I could no longer work in a public setting.

Since I've been working from my home, though, I've learned a few things about how fear and panic attacks affect me, and with the help of learning correct breathing techniques, relaxation exercises and a few other helpful things, I'm now able to recognize the first symptoms of untriggered panic attacks and use the techniques to avoid having an attack. In fact, I found the answer to breaking the fear/panic cycle online!

Now, I'm able to work amongst other people, but I enjoy my online job so much, that I don't see why I should waste my gas money and time on two thirty-minute one-way commutes, to a job where I have a boss and earn 35 - 40% less! If I did that, I really would be crazy! And spiders? Live and let live!




Did you know that every 8 seconds someone in the US has a panic attack? True! And sometimes I'm one of them! How about you?

I've had panic attacks that have lasted 30+ minutes, and was absolutely certain I was having a heart attack! I couldn't breathe, I had chest and neck pains, my left arm hurt, yet at the same time was numb; how weird is that?. Although I still feel the symptoms of panic attack coming on, from time to time, I've learned how to take control of my thoughts and reactions, and have changed my lifestyle to drastically decrease the chances of panic attack.

Click Here To find out Step-By-Step how I took control of my Anxiety and Finally Ended My Panic Attacks.





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

2011年12月26日 星期一

The End of Summer Means Pest Control Adjustments For Year-Round Insects and a New Rodent Attack


Most of those insects that pester us during the hot summer days are snug in their winter homes here in the Midwest. I noticed a couple fruit flies buzzing around over the last few days, but I know they'll disappear soon enough.

That doesn't mean freedom from your pest control efforts though. You just need a change to pest control tactics that battle the cold weather visitors you don't want invading your home.

Pest control requires your attention 12-months every year, not just when it's warm.

You still must watch out for a couple of insects that stay active no matter what the season, though they slow down their activities when they're cold. Then there's that little 4-legged guy, and his bigger cousin, that likes the warmth you make available when the out-of-doors atmosphere loses its comfort.

Beyond your usual inspection for cockroaches and spiders, cold weather means an additional pest control procedure for checking along your walls (especially in the corners) for those little calling cards that alert you to the arrival of the rodents.

Most spiders don't bother you except for the unsightly cobwebs they weave in the upper corners of the walls. Use a broom for that, it works well for handling cobwebs.

I see the population of brown recluse spiders constantly growing around my place here in Indiana. Every year I find more of them in my house, and in my storage barn. I advise you study some pictures of these highly poisonous spiders until you know what they look like from a distance. You don't want to get to close to these guys.

Once you recognize them at a glance from three feet or so just spray them with an insecticide. You must constantly be on the watch for them all 12-months of the year. Those sprays only last so long, and once the potency disappears new brown recluse move right back in.

At least that's my experience.

Cockroaches make their home in your walls, venture out mostly after the house is dark, and then usually only visit the inside spaces of your cabinets where they find food, or under your sinks, running along pipes where they get their drinking water.

Most of the time you won't even see these guys because they're shy and don't venture out into open spaces much. When you do see them they're usually in the kitchen roaming around your floors and countertops. Spotting roaches is often a middle-of-the-night thing when you walk into your kitchen, and suddenly turn on the light - and they all go scurrying for cover. Sometimes you find them before lighting up the room when you step down and feel them crunching under your foot.

When the population grows to the size that you see them running around in the open is when you know you have a large infestation of cockroaches. By then your job of eliminating them is difficult.

The variety of roach that infests your kitchen is most likely the German cockroach, and your best method for treating is bait placement.

Then there's that rodent I mentioned.

These pests don't venture out into the open much either. Sometimes you catch movement from the corner of your eye, and maybe catch sight of a mouse running along a wall. Most times you don't see them, but you know they're around because you find those droppings every day.

Rodents like to stay out of sight when they have the opportunity. They rarely run out into the middle of a room.

Cardboard tunnels with glue boards placed inside make great traps for mice and rats. They think the tunnel is wonderful place to hide, and become stuck on the glue. Mechanical traps capture rodents successfully when you place something tasty on the trigger.

Rodent baits are most effective for mice and rats. The problem with placing baits is the rodent eats the bait then crawls inside your wall to die. That means you live with a stink that lasts three or four days for most decaying mice, and one to two weeks for dead rats.

With awareness that new seasonal pests have different habits you'll still be in control. Just make those pest control inspection changes to address those new habits, and you'll keep the populations down.

Pest control is a process that requires your attention all year. Don't let your guard down just because the weather turns cold.




Joseph Jackson is an experienced pest control technician and author of RODENT RIDDANCE, a how to guide for performing do-it-yourself pest control for controlling mice and rats.

If you're looking for more do-it-yourself pest control techniques you'll find Joe's book that covers all his most problematic Pest Control Technician experiences at: BUG RIDDANCE, Rats And Mice Too!





This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.