Surviving a plague of moths
Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening
"Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? -- Roy Millar, Use m o u l i n e t @ There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. I keep finding moths hiding in unlikely places during the day. AFAIK they are mainly nocturnal and so have to find a safe retreat during the heat of the day. I am trying to explain gently that my stock of timber in the garage which I am using in my ever ongoing en-suite project is not a safe place to hide, but every time I pull out another piece of timber I find a moth hiding in the gaps below. If you can bear it, please don't eliminate them. Obviously check that they are not clothes moths first :-) AFAIK they are completely harmless and beneficial to the garden, much like butterflies. They seem to take over from the butterflies in the evening, flitting between the flowers. Cheers Dave R |
Surviving a plague of moths
In article ,
"David W.E. Roberts" wrote: "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? If you can bear it, please don't eliminate them. Obviously check that they are not clothes moths first :-) AFAIK they are completely harmless and beneficial to the garden, much like butterflies. Sounds like it might be meal moths. They like flour and particularly peanuts. They are a bugger to get rid of and you have to use a special insecticide for months. Ordinary household insecticide doesn't touch them. Make sure all possible stored food is sealed so the grubs can't get at it. |
Surviving a plague of moths
"David W.E. Roberts" wrote in message ...
Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? -- Roy Millar, Use m o u l i n e t @ There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. I keep finding moths hiding in unlikely places during the day. AFAIK they are mainly nocturnal and so have to find a safe retreat during the heat of the day. I am trying to explain gently that my stock of timber in the garage which I am using in my ever ongoing en-suite project is not a safe place to hide, but every time I pull out another piece of timber I find a moth hiding in the gaps below. If you can bear it, please don't eliminate them. Obviously check that they are not clothes moths first :-) AFAIK they are completely harmless and beneficial to the garden, much like butterflies. They seem to take over from the butterflies in the evening, flitting between the flowers. I like moths: many of them are much more elegant than butterflies. The children and I used to set a moth trap overnight and admire and release our haul in the morning. Collins Gem Guide to Butterflies and Moths is very good for identifying. Clothes moths are very small, and I doubt if you'd get clouds of them in the garden. Cabbage moths are the night equivalent of cabbage white butterflies; codlin moths are the ones which put caterpillars in apples; and I find mullein moths troublesome on verbascums here in West Wales. All these are shades of brown -- at rest, the mulleins look just like old bits of bark. Also a pest are winter moths, which you won't have just now, as, surprisingly, they appear in the winter: grease bands round your apple trees will stop the wingless females climbing up and creating havoc. Mike. |
Surviving a plague of moths
The message
from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) |
Surviving a plague of moths
The message
from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) |
Surviving a plague of moths
The message
from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) |
Surviving a plague of moths
Janet Baraclough wrote in message ... The message from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) Clothes moths officially died out according to a website I came across. Forget the year and the website, but trust me all moths around today are friends. |
Surviving a plague of moths
Janet Baraclough wrote in message ... The message from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) Clothes moths officially died out according to a website I came across. Forget the year and the website, but trust me all moths around today are friends. |
Surviving a plague of moths
Janet Baraclough wrote in message ... The message from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) Clothes moths officially died out according to a website I came across. Forget the year and the website, but trust me all moths around today are friends. |
Surviving a plague of moths
The message
from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) |
Surviving a plague of moths
Janet Baraclough wrote in message ... The message from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) Clothes moths officially died out according to a website I came across. Forget the year and the website, but trust me all moths around today are friends. |
Surviving a plague of moths
The message
from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) |
Surviving a plague of moths
Janet Baraclough wrote in message ... The message from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) Clothes moths officially died out according to a website I came across. Forget the year and the website, but trust me all moths around today are friends. |
Surviving a plague of moths
In the 'olden days' Mum used to put "moth-balls" in the wardrobes to
discourage moths (not kill them as far as I know). These were naphthalene, and smelled pretty horrid as far as I remember, but it must be better than squashing them (even for a phobic like me). Regards, Aileen "anne" wrote in message ... Janet Baraclough wrote in message ... The message from "David W.E. Roberts" contains these words: Cross posted to uk.rec.gardening "Roy Millar" wrote in message ... Don't know what I could have done to encourage them, but I'm suffering a plague of small (clothes?) moths. Anyone know of reasonably safe ways of eliminating them? There are loads of moths around at present but I doubt they are clothes moths. I don't think they do very well on modern artificial fabrics. Funnily enough in the past fortnight we too have a plague of moths in the house which look exactly like clothes moths; something I've hardly seen for years even though most of our clothes and domestic fabrics are natural fibres. I've been squashing them. Janet (Isle of Arran) Clothes moths officially died out according to a website I came across. Forget the year and the website, but trust me all moths around today are friends. |
Surviving a plague of moths
On Mon, 11 Aug 2003 03:16:40 +0100, "anne"
wrote: Clothes moths officially died out according to a website I came across. with the end of ration books? Forget the year and the website, but trust me all moths around today are friends. -- Martin |
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