Termite Update
Aug. 18th, 2009 11:08 pmSo after a day of research, freaking out, and running around the outside of the house to discover where the fuckers might have gotten in, I've leaned a few things:
1) The biggest reason the termites are attacking my house is because the leak in the bathtub faucet had kept that area moist for years.
Termites need two things to live: wood and water. While fixing the faucet (as I've already done) and making sure the area gets properly ventilated in the future won't completely solve the problem, it will make the area unpalatable to future (and current) termites. Naturally this makes me wonder what's going on in *other* areas of the house that have been habitually moister than intended. After the other treatment is done, I will probably get a space heater with a blower and set it a safe distance away from the hole to dry things out again.
2) I have a lot of work to do outside to stop this from happening again. I've done a fairly good job trimming back the trees so they don't touch the roof, but the fence touches the house on one side, so do several bushes and gutters, and I haven't cleaned the gutters in over a year. I think I'm going to get or make some of those gutter cover to make it easier to keep things clean. This will also improve the quality of my captured rainwater.
3) Killing the queen will help, but other reproductive termites can become a new queen on fairly short notice, so it's not a one-shot-one-kill situation. When they swarm, every set of termites could start a new nest, so having the protection of a foundation, etc., doesn't help you in that instance. The only defense is to have a house with no external entrances (not fucking likely with the white stone facings I have) or to make sure everything is dry enough not to appeal.
1) The biggest reason the termites are attacking my house is because the leak in the bathtub faucet had kept that area moist for years.
Termites need two things to live: wood and water. While fixing the faucet (as I've already done) and making sure the area gets properly ventilated in the future won't completely solve the problem, it will make the area unpalatable to future (and current) termites. Naturally this makes me wonder what's going on in *other* areas of the house that have been habitually moister than intended. After the other treatment is done, I will probably get a space heater with a blower and set it a safe distance away from the hole to dry things out again.
2) I have a lot of work to do outside to stop this from happening again. I've done a fairly good job trimming back the trees so they don't touch the roof, but the fence touches the house on one side, so do several bushes and gutters, and I haven't cleaned the gutters in over a year. I think I'm going to get or make some of those gutter cover to make it easier to keep things clean. This will also improve the quality of my captured rainwater.
3) Killing the queen will help, but other reproductive termites can become a new queen on fairly short notice, so it's not a one-shot-one-kill situation. When they swarm, every set of termites could start a new nest, so having the protection of a foundation, etc., doesn't help you in that instance. The only defense is to have a house with no external entrances (not fucking likely with the white stone facings I have) or to make sure everything is dry enough not to appeal.
no subject
Date: 2009-08-19 09:01 pm (UTC)Stethoscope? kiiiinky....
;)
no subject
Date: 2009-08-19 10:18 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-19 10:20 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2009-08-20 06:20 am (UTC)