The first and foremost for me are millipedes. Yesterday afternoon when it was raining, I took the opportunity to head outside to look for millipedes for photos. I could not find a single one. While disappointed, I knew that I had seen some at home so I figured I could get my photo there. When I got home I was starving so I started making dinner. In the middle of cooking bacon (it was a breakfast for dinner night), I was looking around the kitchen and spotted a millipede walking across the ceiling. Instead of climbing on the counter to take a picture, I went outside and found plenty to photograph. After that, I proceeded to pick up about 30 millipedes in various areas of the house.

Pillbugs are the other big one that can venture inside when we have heavy rains. Sowbugs and pillbugs are crustaceans (related to crabs, crayfish and lobsters). They require moist environments and usually die quickly when they move indoors due to lack of moisture. Sowbugs and pillbugs have oval shaped bodies, 7 pairs of legs and 2 pair of antennae (only one pair is easily visible). Sowbugs have two tail-like appendages that come off the tip of the abdomen. Pillbugs do not have a tail-like appendage and pillbugs can also roll up into a ball when disturbed (hence the name roly-poly).

If you are having problems with these nuisance pests moving indoors, then you should focus on the outside of the structure to exclude them. Once things dry out then it should go back to normal.
- turn mulch often; adjust watering schedules
- remove any debris laying near structures or areas you do not want pests
- allow air to flow through crawl spaces by using the proper amount of ventilation
- fix any leaking faucets, AC lines, water pipes, etc.
- make sure gutters and drains carry water away from the structure
- make sure doors and windows have a proper seal; replace weather stripping, thresh holds, etc.
- apply sealant to any cracks & crevices and to where pipes or wires penetrate the building
I'll need to cover mosquitoes soon....stay tuned!
Love this! Now I know the difference between sowbug and pillbug. Love the millipede supervising your bacon dinner (nom). Sometimes I get a water bug (roach to me) on the ceiling as I cook. I say, "I'm not swatting you as I cook, so you lucked out. This time. . ."
ReplyDeleteThanks for this - we've seen millipedes in the house for the first time in years. In Texas, are millipedes poisonous? Or, is that centipedes? Or neither.
ReplyDeleteThe millipedes aren't really a problem, but we have some very large centipedes in Texas that can inflict a painful bite!
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