How to Get Rid of Sand Ants
Ants are a nuisance anywhere they are found, but they can be especially hard to extricate from sand. There are a number of ant repellents that you can make out of items you already have on hand. Cinnamon, chili powder, baking soda and peppermint are all known to repel ants.
Borax is also an alternative to dangerous pesticides.
Things You Will Need
- Ground cinnamon
- Baking soda
- Chili powder
- Small mixing bowl
- Peppermint extract
- Spray bottle
- Borax
- Icing sugar
- Small bowls
Warning
The borax and icing sugar can be harmful to pets. Remove pets from the area where the small bowls are in place. As a last resort, chemical ant killers can be used. Children, pets and other animals should be kept away from any place the poison has been spread.
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Mix one part ground cinnamon, one part baking soda and one part chili powder in a small mixing bowl.
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Sprinkle the mixture around the perimeter of the sand. All three of these are ant repellents and the ants will almost never cross the boundary you've created.
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Combine 15 to 20 drops of peppermint extract with water in a plastic spray bottle. Shake well before each use.
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Spray the mixture over the path of the ants, as well as over the sand that the ants inhabit. Peppermint is a powerful natural ant repellent, and sand ants will avoid it at all costs.
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Mix one part borax with one part icing sugar and pour the mixture into small bowls. Place the bowls in sand the ants inhabit. The icing sugar will draw the ants, and they will take the mixture back to their den as food. When they feed the borax to their queen, it will kill her, and the ants will eventually die off.
The Drip Cap
- Ants are a nuisance anywhere they are found, but they can be especially hard to extricate from sand.
- Shake well before each use.
- Mix one part borax with one part icing sugar and pour the mixture into small bowls.
- The icing sugar will draw the ants, and they will take the mixture back to their den as food.
Writer Bio
Willow Sidhe is a freelance writer living in the beautiful Hot Springs, AR. She is a certified aromatherapist with a background in herbalism. She has extensive experience gardening, with a specialty in indoor plants and herbs. Sidhe's work has been published on numerous Web sites, including Gardenguides.com.
Photo Credits
- Neil Gould
- Neil Gould
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