At our work, we have a severe ant infestation, the very small black kind. Let's just say, there will be no photos. And it's puzzling. Although the building is an old house with additions done to it, no one has lived there in years. There is no food preparation, no food storage. We bring in our lunches but haul everything out each night. We are fairly careful with garbage. What are they eating?
Husband has been diligently waging war on them with chemical products with little or no affect. Whereever they live, it is scary and has to go.
Some years back, when I was just a young woman, I had a similar infestation in a house I was living in. My older neighbor told me a recipe and procedure that he recommended. I tried it and it worked perfectly. I going to be trying it again.
1 part old fashioned powdered borax, 1 part powdered sugar, 1 part yeast. Although there are no photos, I'm going to be graphic here. If you are a little sensitive, look away now.
My neighbor said that each of these three ingredients has an important job. The sugar is the attractant. They want to carry it back to the nest as food. The borax is soap. It keeps the mixture together and sticks to their bodies. The yeast is what kills them. When they ingest it, the live yeast activates and explodes the ants.
Hope I haven't alarmed anyone, but this is serious.
I'm going to try this recipe again over the next few days. I'll let you know what happens.
We are changing here at the Osbornes. Working towards a healthier diet. It may be a journey.
Showing posts with label Folk Wisdom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Folk Wisdom. Show all posts
Wednesday, April 20, 2011
Tuesday, December 14, 2010
How Clean is Clean?
I don't mean to be too preachy. But wait a second, I'm about to lauch a rant. So if you don't like that, you may be excused.
I'm 51 years old. I rather like that I've reached a certain age and think I have a perspective that the young ones haven't yet reached. They don't agree, but that's fine too.
It is very difficult to purchase a soap product at the grocery store that doesn't have words "anti-bacterial" on it somewhere. At some point, it was cool and very commercial to advertise that your product killed germs. And who wouldn't want that? You want your house, your kitchen and bathrooms clean. You don't want germs. No one can argue. But is clean clean enough? Can you get too clean?
Please understand that being my age means that my parents were children in the early Depression. The last one. My grandparents were young adults. All in rural Oklahoma. My mother's parents were farmers. Watermellon was a main crop. My father's parents were ranchers and lived just miles away. Their families knew each other.
Both families lived in houses without plumbing until the children were big. I don't mean to over-explain here. That means there were no flush toilets, no sinks, no bath tubs, no running water of any type. No hot water heater. You get it.
They went to the outhouse to use the bathroom. My mom spent her entire life terrified of snakes. And with good reason. During the time she was my Mom, we lived in a place with small non-threatening garter snakes. Who could be afraid of that? But during her youth, she went to outhouse, warm and wet. Various creatures liked to hang out there, including rattlesnakes. My grandmother would take her children to the outhouse and guard them with a shovel while they used the outhouse. According to family history, my grandmother was very good at killing large snakes by chopping at their heads with the end of the shovel. There are many details about my family heritage that I doubt, but that's what Grandpa always told us. There was no sink to wash up, no antibacterial soap.
They raised chickens and killed them for food, chopping off their heads, gutting and plucking them. Never done it myself. But I've killed a few critters in my time. This wouldn't have been a process where everyone stopped and washed up with paper towels and antibacterial soap.
My mom told the story of once-a-week baths. In dry hot dusty Oklahoma summers it is hard for those with modern sensibilites to imagine hawling water to a tub, then each person bathing in the same water until the last person. And repeating next week.
Understand, we are not talking about the Pilgrams, the Middle Ages, George and Martha Washington. We are talking about my parents. I'm old, but really not. This wasn't that long ago that this was not an uncommon lifestyle.
Both of my Grandmothers saw 90. My Mom is alive and 73. I come from a family that is very healthy, more than most. The human being is an incredibly strong and powerful being, much more than we commonly realize on a daily basis. Built into us is this amazing imune system. I don't have any medical training, but I believe that we are exposed all of the time to germs and bacteria of all types. That our immune system is supported by this continued exposure, this continued fighting off of bugs. Of course, this may not be true of people with impared immune systems. I don't mean to make statements for others.
So what is clean enough? I was taught that anything that got dirty could be cleaned. Soap and "elbow grease" (meaning physical effort) applied liberally and often, cleaned everything. Repeat the next day. I don't get manicures. My hands are working hands. They do things. And when I'm done, I "wash up" with soap.
When I prepare chicken, I wash my sink, put the chicken in it to clean and pick over it, then wash the sink again. Am I concerned about getting sick? Hasn't happened yet?
I'm 51 years old. I rather like that I've reached a certain age and think I have a perspective that the young ones haven't yet reached. They don't agree, but that's fine too.
It is very difficult to purchase a soap product at the grocery store that doesn't have words "anti-bacterial" on it somewhere. At some point, it was cool and very commercial to advertise that your product killed germs. And who wouldn't want that? You want your house, your kitchen and bathrooms clean. You don't want germs. No one can argue. But is clean clean enough? Can you get too clean?
Please understand that being my age means that my parents were children in the early Depression. The last one. My grandparents were young adults. All in rural Oklahoma. My mother's parents were farmers. Watermellon was a main crop. My father's parents were ranchers and lived just miles away. Their families knew each other.
Both families lived in houses without plumbing until the children were big. I don't mean to over-explain here. That means there were no flush toilets, no sinks, no bath tubs, no running water of any type. No hot water heater. You get it.
They went to the outhouse to use the bathroom. My mom spent her entire life terrified of snakes. And with good reason. During the time she was my Mom, we lived in a place with small non-threatening garter snakes. Who could be afraid of that? But during her youth, she went to outhouse, warm and wet. Various creatures liked to hang out there, including rattlesnakes. My grandmother would take her children to the outhouse and guard them with a shovel while they used the outhouse. According to family history, my grandmother was very good at killing large snakes by chopping at their heads with the end of the shovel. There are many details about my family heritage that I doubt, but that's what Grandpa always told us. There was no sink to wash up, no antibacterial soap.
They raised chickens and killed them for food, chopping off their heads, gutting and plucking them. Never done it myself. But I've killed a few critters in my time. This wouldn't have been a process where everyone stopped and washed up with paper towels and antibacterial soap.
My mom told the story of once-a-week baths. In dry hot dusty Oklahoma summers it is hard for those with modern sensibilites to imagine hawling water to a tub, then each person bathing in the same water until the last person. And repeating next week.
Understand, we are not talking about the Pilgrams, the Middle Ages, George and Martha Washington. We are talking about my parents. I'm old, but really not. This wasn't that long ago that this was not an uncommon lifestyle.
Both of my Grandmothers saw 90. My Mom is alive and 73. I come from a family that is very healthy, more than most. The human being is an incredibly strong and powerful being, much more than we commonly realize on a daily basis. Built into us is this amazing imune system. I don't have any medical training, but I believe that we are exposed all of the time to germs and bacteria of all types. That our immune system is supported by this continued exposure, this continued fighting off of bugs. Of course, this may not be true of people with impared immune systems. I don't mean to make statements for others.
So what is clean enough? I was taught that anything that got dirty could be cleaned. Soap and "elbow grease" (meaning physical effort) applied liberally and often, cleaned everything. Repeat the next day. I don't get manicures. My hands are working hands. They do things. And when I'm done, I "wash up" with soap.
When I prepare chicken, I wash my sink, put the chicken in it to clean and pick over it, then wash the sink again. Am I concerned about getting sick? Hasn't happened yet?
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