Shari said:Did you know if you pour gasoline on a carpenter ant nest and light it on fire you can hear the ants 'scream'? Kind of freaks a person out.....
Shari
ohio woodburner said:Dave i wouldn't worry about them ants they'll leave. I wouldn't dump gas on em either. My neighbor puts kerosene on them. I told him if i could afford to dump good kerosene on the wood I'd turn my thermostat up. :lol: Was it tricky to get that tree down?
:lol:firefighterjake said:As others have said usually when I see carpenter ants in a tree I know the tree was on its way out . . . there was an issue with the tree to begin with and that's why they're there . . .
As for what to do . . . buck the wood, split the wood and they'll leave . . . I mean think about it . . . what would you do if some big ol' giant came along while you were sitting at home watching TV and hanging out with the family and proceeded to tear into your house with a chainsaw . . . your house is being shaken apart by the giant chain racing through the wood, the noxious exhaust is getting to you, hot metal and oil is being splattered all over the place . . . and we're not even talking about any of the death, injuries and carnage.
And then a minute or two later just when you think the worse of it is over and you've started to gather your wits and think about what you need to do to rebuild your home which is now in two or three pieces that giant returns and starts whacking your home into even smaller pieces . . . with a Fiskars . . . there goes your master bedroom . . . there goes the living room . . . there goes the kid's bedrooms . . . so now your home is in four to six sections, totally exposed to the elements (not to mention your mortal enemies -- and I'm not talking about the car salesman down the road . . . I'm talking about your other neighbor who has threatened to kill you and your family in the past) . . . would you still want to stay there . . . heck no, you'd be grabbing the kids, the babies, your mother-in-law (well maybe you'd leave her behind) and vacating the premises to go find another nice place to live.
firefighterjake said:I mean think about it . . . what would you do if some big ol' giant came along while you were sitting at home watching TV and hanging out with the family and proceeded to tear into your house with a chainsaw . . . your house is being shaken apart by the giant chain racing through the wood, the noxious exhaust is getting to you, hot metal and oil is being splattered all over the place . . . and we're not even talking about any of the death, injuries and carnage.
And then a minute or two later just when you think the worse of it is over and you've started to gather your wits and think about what you need to do to rebuild your home which is now in two or three pieces that giant returns and starts whacking your home into even smaller pieces . . . with a Fiskars . . . there goes your master bedroom . . . there goes the living room . . . there goes the kid's bedrooms . . . so now your home is in four to six sections, totally exposed to the elements (not to mention your mortal enemies -- and I'm not talking about the car salesman down the road . . . I'm talking about your other neighbor who has threatened to kill you and your family in the past) . . . would you still want to stay there . . . heck no, you'd be grabbing the kids, the babies, your mother-in-law (well maybe you'd leave her behind) and vacating the premises to go find another nice place to live.
firefighterjake said:As others have said usually when I see carpenter ants in a tree I know the tree was on its way out . . . there was an issue with the tree to begin with and that's why they're there . . .
As for what to do . . . buck the wood, split the wood and they'll leave . . . I mean think about it . . . what would you do if some big ol' giant came along while you were sitting at home watching TV and hanging out with the family and proceeded to tear into your house with a chainsaw . . . your house is being shaken apart by the giant chain racing through the wood, the noxious exhaust is getting to you, hot metal and oil is being splattered all over the place . . . and we're not even talking about any of the death, injuries and carnage.
And then a minute or two later just when you think the worse of it is over and you've started to gather your wits and think about what you need to do to rebuild your home which is now in two or three pieces that giant returns and starts whacking your home into even smaller pieces . . . with a Fiskars . . . there goes your master bedroom . . . there goes the living room . . . there goes the kid's bedrooms . . . so now your home is in four to six sections, totally exposed to the elements (not to mention your mortal enemies -- and I'm not talking about the car salesman down the road . . . I'm talking about your other neighbor who has threatened to kill you and your family in the past) . . . would you still want to stay there . . . heck no, you'd be grabbing the kids, the babies, your mother-in-law (well maybe you'd leave her behind) and vacating the premises to go find another nice place to live.
bogydave said:firefighterjake said:As others have said usually when I see carpenter ants in a tree I know the tree was on its way out . . . there was an issue with the tree to begin with and that's why they're there . . .
As for what to do . . . buck the wood, split the wood and they'll leave . . . I mean think about it . . . what would you do if some big ol' giant came along while you were sitting at home watching TV and hanging out with the family and proceeded to tear into your house with a chainsaw . . . your house is being shaken apart by the giant chain racing through the wood, the noxious exhaust is getting to you, hot metal and oil is being splattered all over the place . . . and we're not even talking about any of the death, injuries and carnage.
And then a minute or two later just when you think the worse of it is over and you've started to gather your wits and think about what you need to do to rebuild your home which is now in two or three pieces that giant returns and starts whacking your home into even smaller pieces . . . with a Fiskars . . . there goes your master bedroom . . . there goes the living room . . . there goes the kid's bedrooms . . . so now your home is in four to six sections, totally exposed to the elements (not to mention your mortal enemies -- and I'm not talking about the car salesman down the road . . . I'm talking about your other neighbor who has threatened to kill you and your family in the past) . . . would you still want to stay there . . . heck no, you'd be grabbing the kids, the babies, your mother-in-law (well maybe you'd leave her behind) and vacating the premises to go find another nice place to live.
Now I feel like a home wrecker. Sadistic home wrecker, ("death, injuries, carnage") & a polluter: "noxious exhaust, hot metal & oil" & tree killer & I don't like my "Mother-in-law".
Gosh, thanks for the motivational speech. LOL
Maybe I'll feel better when I use their home to heat my home but don't think so.
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