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Your cart is empty.Roxanne
Reviewed in the United States on February 7, 2025
You got that little bugs in your cereal or flour, these will do the trick. They are called pantry beetles, and no that doesn't mean you are a dirty housekeeper, it means they came form the store and spread around your pantry. I have these in my pantry as for some reason the stores still have them. It does help to have plastic containers on the shelves so the bug stay contained to one area, but they still tend to get around but not as much. Also it helps to put your rice, flour, and items like that in zip-lock bags, that really does help stop them. I double bag my rice and flour. No one can prevent them, if the store has them so do you, but there are ways to keep them down and you don't end of eating them, yuck.
Tyranamar Suess
Reviewed in the United States on February 11, 2025
These work great for pantry moths. I've seen none flying around my house. But tons stuck in these things. And they last a long time. Months if you want. Although it gets kind of gross looking at all the little dead moth bodies. So you may want to switch them out more frequently. Very happy with this purchase. When you finally clean out all the cupboards. Then put these out. You can tell what area the new infestation is coming from, bc your trap will be full of moths in that area. Although honestly, I didn't even notice. I put them at the back of the cupboard and they did their job. I'm purchasing more now.
Mike Welch
Reviewed in the United States on January 31, 2025
Worked Ok but won't put an end to infestation unless you also inspect all cereal and grain packages. We found some in packages that didn't appear to be open. These are flypaper cards that fold into a triangle. To get the most coverage we cut some of them into three individual cards and taped them to inside cabinet walls. Helpful to know that only the larvae feed, the adult moths do not eat, they only procreate. So look for white worms a half inch or shorter.
Monty and Lizzy
Reviewed in the United States on January 17, 2025
Those pantry moths drive me CRAZY! These traps work so good! I leave them out all year long, just so I will know if I have them again. Cereals are bad about having them, even when you bring them home from the store. These will put an end to it. They attract the moths, and before long, you will stop seeing them. But be sure you clean out your pantry and find the source!
Jimmy Nguyen
Reviewed in the United States on September 13, 2024
There was a huge moth infestation at my parents' house--it was bad to the point where maybe a couple would seep into an unsealed (but seemingly closed) bag of ground flaxseed or an open canister of spices in the kitchen somehow and make a whole home with all sorts of webbing within.One of the main areas of infestation was in one particular room in the basement that had a good dozen or more of them flying around like they owned the room. So my mom got advice from someone and thought moth balls were a good solution along with closing off and really sealing that room with the infestation. I said it was a bad idea, but she said she knew what she was doing, so I said, ooooooook..... long story short: 2 or 3 days later I ran into the room to grab some canned drinks and there were larvae and brown casings everywhere... they truly owned the room now LOL.So with a bit of research and searching online, I found these traps and saw they had good reviews. Yes, they very much work! Within a few days, most of the (presumably) male moths were flying into them, leaving the female moths out to dry (lol). Obviously if eggs can't be laid, then over some period of time the moth population should be eradicated, especially given the females only have a lifespan of 1-3 weeks or so. I would say after just those few days, I only saw 2 or 3 occasionally flying around. They could've just been females.The manufacturer recommends replacing the traps either if they are full or if 90 days have passed. A couple of them seem heavily populated, but not quite full by my definition so I decided to leave them to see what would happen over time (see my uploaded photos).Now a full month has passed, and I think they are probably 98-99% gone. Still see one flying from time to time, but it seems like they should disappear for good before the winter.Some additional notes based on my observations over the last 30 days:1) It is possible the pantry moths in larva form like eating clothes, but, from research, they only do so as a last resort. I had a feeling clothes moths were also players at the table in this game, so I ordered the the clothes moth variants of the traps as well. Didn't catch much in the first few days, but after that, the traps started populating, especially with tiny ones that just grew out of their casings.2) As a precaution, I moved all my clothes into my car to bake in the heat and kill off any potential eggs or larvae. They say clothes being in 135F heat for at least 30 min should be sufficient (or being in a dryer on high setting or dry cleaning).3) Do not be afraid to swat any still flying around. If you see two stuck together in the mating process like I still did maybe once a week or so, you MUST especially swat them as if you were saving the world from being taken over by a bunch of aliens like in one of those movies because female pantry moths, after mating, are capable of laying hundreds of eggs (on average like 500-800). If they are successful, the cycle starts all over again. Granted if it happens, with the traps, it would just take a little longer and probably more traps to eradicate them from your space.Conclusion: traps are worth the price and will save you so much time, energy, and headaches from trying other solutions and needing to repeatedly take other actions like throwing out or replacing food items or clothes, etc. Have a pantry moth problem? Don't think about it, just buy now.
Stephen
Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2024
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