Lady Bug Infestation

   / Lady Bug Infestation
  • Thread Starter
#11  
You're right. We have had them for years. They were there while we were building the cabin. They have even been worse than they are now.....but we weren't living there full time. It is normally just a weekend place.

It does make you wonder about them being imported by folks who should know better. Do species imported to solve a problem ever work without causing a new problem? They poster child for unintended consequences here in the south is Kudzu. It swallows whole towns!
 
   / Lady Bug Infestation #12  
About a month ago I was on my open-station backhoe and the lady beetles were swarming me so bad I almost gave up trying to work. I thought I was going to have to wear a bandana just to keep them out of my nose.:mad:

They seem to be worse just as all the leaves turn brown and the trees go into their winter mode. As soon as spring rolls around and the trees start leafing out, the beetles go back to the woods, only to appear in the garden to help with aphid control. They are a pain, but we use a little hand-held vacuum to suck them up and dump them outside. If they stay in the vacuum, the next time it is turned on, it will stink up the whole house with their smell. Unfortunately, they like our west wall where most of our doors to our house are located. The warmth of the west wall and doors and windows seems to be a big attraction. Sorry. . .I don't have a solution, only an anecdote.:confused3:
 
   / Lady Bug Infestation #13  
Yup.
They are here too, in our houses in the winter , they invade us in October every year and come inside for the winter. They don't stop at the border and they keep on getting up north , they should know better , like birds, and stay where it's warmer.lol
At -28* yesterday I felt like shop vac them up and letting them loose outside!!!
 
   / Lady Bug Infestation #14  
They seem to be the worst around here when soybeans are in the rotation. Have not been that bad in the last couple of years.
 
   / Lady Bug Infestation #15  
They'll start showing up here after the first frost. It seems to trigger them to start looking for someplace to winter. The really do stink if squashed and they will bite. Just get one down your shirt. I can deal with these beetles easier than those jumping carp the DOA allowed in our country that have taken over the Mississippi River. What a bunch of idiots we have in that department.
 
   / Lady Bug Infestation #16  
Bad stinkbug infestation in the Indian Springs area of Western MD. Vac is the only way I can catch them. I was really PO'd until I developed a game, Stinkflick. While sitting in my chair near the woodstove and under a bright reading lamp that really attracts stinkbugs, I wait until one lands on my chair or body, I line him up with the stove, on which is an open pan of hot water, and give him a good flick with the thumb and second finger. With some practice you can bank shot the bug off the fireplace, into the hot water. After a bit of practice, you can do a hard shot off the fireplace on to the stove surface, the record so far for stinkbug backflips is six, before they become toast. Good luck and good flicking.
 
   / Lady Bug Infestation #17  
   / Lady Bug Infestation #18  
Bad stinkbug infestation in the Indian Springs area of Western MD. Vac is the only way I can catch them. I was really PO'd until I developed a game, Stinkflick. While sitting in my chair near the woodstove and under a bright reading lamp that really attracts stinkbugs, I wait until one lands on my chair or body, I line him up with the stove, on which is an open pan of hot water, and give him a good flick with the thumb and second finger. With some practice you can bank shot the bug off the fireplace, into the hot water. After a bit of practice, you can do a hard shot off the fireplace on to the stove surface, the record so far for stinkbug backflips is six, before they become toast. Good luck and good flicking.

:laughing::thumbsup::laughing:
 
   / Lady Bug Infestation #19  
reekes4300, you are right about the morons in the Department of Agriculture. They thought they were going to control the soybean aphids. Farmers will tell you they had little if any affect on the aphid population.

But its gets worse. The ash trees in Minnesota, like the rest of the country, are being attacked by some vermin that bores into the tree. But there is a great plan to deal with the problem.

We are going to import some type of Chinese wasp that consumes the bug that kills the ash trees. Well, isn't that great. They tell us that these wasps don't sting.

So imagine your house full of lady bugs/beetles. Now replace that image with a house full of Chinese wasps.

Only the great minds of our Minnesota public officials could come up with a plan like that.
 
   / Lady Bug Infestation
  • Thread Starter
#20  
Thanks guys. Only good thing about this is that with it getting dark at 5:30 pm, no internet, no TV and too worn out to read anything of substance I'm making a game (or grudge match) of vacuuming up as many as I can.

Periodically I put a shot of bug spary down the vacuum hose. Don't want any repeat customers. I know these things can be beneficial.....but there seem to be plenty to go around.
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

2018 KENWORTH T370 T/A DUMP TRUCK (A51406)
2018 KENWORTH T370...
2017 GEHL RS5-19 TELEHANDLER (A51242)
2017 GEHL RS5-19...
UNUSED CFG Industrial QK18R Mini Excavator (A47384)
UNUSED CFG...
2013 Nissan Pathfinder SUV (A50324)
2013 Nissan...
2018 Infiniti QX30 Premium SUV (A50324)
2018 Infiniti QX30...
2010 International 4400 National Crane 300C Crane Truck (A50323)
2010 International...
 
Top