View Full Version : Walton County's Help with Yellow Flies
seagrover
06-19-2005, 08:05 PM
FYI - If you call Walton County Mosquito Control, sorry I don't have the # now, they will bring out a black sticky ball and hang it in a tree for you - FREE.
They came out a couple of hours after I called on Friday and also gave me instructions for making more.
We have black sticky balls all over our neighborhood - at least some help with those pesky critters!!!
RiverOtter
06-19-2005, 08:21 PM
FYI - If you call Walton County Mosquito Control, sorry I don't have the # now, they will bring out a black sticky ball and hang it in a tree for you - FREE.
They came out a couple of hours after I called on Friday and also gave me instructions for making more.
We have black sticky balls all over our neighborhood - at least some help with those pesky critters!!!
What about bats? Ever tried bat boxes? :cool:
BeachDreamer
06-19-2005, 10:11 PM
What about bats? Ever tried bat boxes? :cool:
We have a huge bat condo with a nursery roost at the top, but so far only wasps have enjoyed it. :( I am hoping soon we will have some bats. Mosquitos here are terrible! I went out for a few minutes yesterday and looked down, and saw at least 10-15 on my legs at once, like it was happy hour. Ahhh! There are negatives to living in the woods... love the privacy, hate the mosquitos.
BeachDreamer
06-19-2005, 10:28 PM
Bats are finicky.
That's for sure! The box has to be a certain color, certain height, certain distance from trees and water, just the right amount of shade, and the list goes on and on. Now that you mention it, that big sticky black ball doesn't sound too bad. :roll:
RiverOtter
06-20-2005, 08:38 AM
Anybody ever try one of these?
http://www.mosquitomagnet.com/images/libplusproduct.jpg
Kim Smith
06-20-2005, 09:26 AM
Yes, we have one of the Mesq. Magnetics and they do work. My husband sells them at his store in Atlanta and he also sells them through ebay.
RiverOtter
06-20-2005, 12:42 PM
Yes, we have one of the Mesq. Magnetics and they do work. My husband sells them at his store in Atlanta and he also sells them through ebay.
Can you give a brotha a hook up? :cool:
Kim Smith
06-20-2005, 03:07 PM
RiverOtter, please clarify.
phdphay
06-20-2005, 04:38 PM
Anybody ever try one of these?
http://www.mosquitomagnet.com/images/libplusproduct.jpg
Saw one on The Today Show. They say they work - I dunno.
Anybody ever try one of these?
http://www.mosquitomagnet.com/images/libplusproduct.jpg
Got one about 3 weeks ago & it's caught about 400 yellow flies. I hope it does just as good on them little blood sucking mosquitoes this summer.
RiverOtter
06-20-2005, 05:57 PM
RiverOtter, please clarify.
Clarification = Where could an ordinary, everyday Otter like myself buy one of these at (trying to help a brotha out) discount :biggrin:
JustBeachy
06-20-2005, 07:21 PM
Seagrover, tell me about the black sticky balls. Did you have to paint your own beach balls? What kind of paint did you use? I'd never heard of this until a few weeks ago, and I'm all for whatever will alieviate those pesky yellow flies QUICKLY!!!
seagrovelover
06-20-2005, 08:08 PM
Ok guys.....I have to tell you, this is freaking me out a little bit. We have vacationed in Seagrove for the past five years.....have had no trouble with yellow flies!! am I in for a surprise ???? we will be there on Sunday. :eek:
Bats are finicky.
Bats are slow and stupid beside the fly.
Anybody ever try one of these?
http://www.mosquitomagnet.com/images/libplusproduct.jpg
I have matches.
Smiling JOe
06-20-2005, 09:10 PM
Where is my 39cent fly swatter?
Waterman
06-20-2005, 09:18 PM
Where is my 39cent fly swatter? :clap_1: :laughing1 :floor: :lolabove: That was good!
Kim Smith
06-20-2005, 09:59 PM
You can call my husband on his cell, 404-391-5845. His name is Harold Smith. He owns 2 hardware stores here in Atlanta and carries them in his store. Just tell him from the So. Walton family and he can see what he can do. He did say he only had 2 left in his stock. He has sold about 14 in the past 2 weeks.
RiverOtter
06-20-2005, 10:00 PM
You can call my husband on his cell, 404-391-5845. His name is Harold Smith. He owns 2 hardware stores here in Atlanta and carries them in his store. Just tell him from the So. Walton family and he can see what he can do. He did say he only had 2 left in his stock. He has sold about 14 in the past 2 weeks.
I think Atlanta and the Nooga have as many Mosquitos and SoWal. No biting flys though :cool:
seagrover
06-20-2005, 10:02 PM
All I know about the black sticky beach ball is - you paint it black - get a sticky gooy stuff from Frank's in Grayton and yellowflies will stick to them - OR
call Walton County Mosquito control and they will make one for you and even hang it!!!
I would think Frank's would know how to make one since they are specifically mentioned in the directions.
JustBeachy
06-21-2005, 08:45 AM
Thanks, I'll try Franks..unintentional rhyme.. :floor:
Ok guys.....I have to tell you, this is freaking me out a little bit. We have vacationed in Seagrove for the past five years.....have had no trouble with yellow flies!! am I in for a surprise ???? we will be there on Sunday. :eek:
Yellow Flies come to town for about 6 weeks & should be out of here around the end of June.
aquaticbiology
06-21-2005, 09:56 AM
data
http://www.levycountymc.org/Yellowfly.html
use the link on the page for even more data on the pesky critters
BeachDreamer
06-21-2005, 01:11 PM
Yes, we have one of the Mesq. Magnetics and they do work. My husband sells them at his store in Atlanta and he also sells them through ebay.
Kim, what size area do they cover, do you know? Could I put it in the front yard and expect coverage in the back? Or do you need to haul it around with you when you move from area to area? Does it actually kill insects, or just repel them? Do you run it all the time, or just when you are outside? Thanks in advance! We are interested!
Kim Smith
06-21-2005, 04:17 PM
BeachDreamer,
My husband would be able to answer those questions for you. You can call him on his cell at 404-391-5845, his name is Harold Smith. If you can't reach him on his cell try his store, that number is 770-939-6842, Handy Ace Hardware and make sure you ask for Harold Smith because there is another Harold that works in plumbing or you can email him at harold@handyacehardware.com.
Kim, what size area do they cover, do you know? Could I put it in the front yard and expect coverage in the back? Or do you need to haul it around with you when you move from area to area? Does it actually kill insects, or just repel them? Do you run it all the time, or just when you are outside? Thanks in advance! We are interested!
The one I got covers 1 acre. You put it anywhere you want it & it is easily moved if needed. They kill the insects by attracting them to the machine & trapping them in a net. The machine runs on propane from a gas cylinder like the ones used on grills & it runs all the time. The tank will need changing about every 3 to 4 weeks.
Smiling JOe
06-21-2005, 06:23 PM
Yellow Flies come to town for about 6 weeks & should be out of here around the end of June.
Obviously, the yellow flies in my area failed to hear about this. They stick around for much longer than that.
Smiling JOe
06-21-2005, 06:26 PM
The one I got covers 1 acre. You put it anywhere you want it & it is easily moved if needed. They kill the insects by attracting them to the machine & trapping them in a net. The machine runs on propane from a gas cylinder like the ones used on grills & it runs all the time. The tank will need changing about every 3 to 4 weeks.
Do they attract all insects? If so, what will be the effects to other creatures in our environment that rely on these or other insects for their food source? I don't mind swatting a few, but the birds and frogs have to eat too.
Almost all U.S. bats, and 70 percent of the bat species worldwide, feed almost exclusively on insects and are thus extremely beneficial. One bat can eat between 600 and 1,000 mosquitoes and other insect pests in just one hour.
Smiling JOe
06-21-2005, 07:08 PM
Almost all U.S. bats, and 70 percent of the bat species worldwide, feed almost exclusively on insects and are thus extremely beneficial. One bat can eat between 600 and 1,000 mosquitoes and other insect pests in just one hour.
I recently saw a story regarding bats in which the scientist stated that the bats eat their own body weight in insects every night. :shock: WOW! :blink:
RiverOtter
06-21-2005, 07:10 PM
I recently saw a story regarding bats in which the scientist stated that the bats eat their own body weight in insects every night. :shock: WOW! :blink:
Then we need more bats :wink:
Smiling JOe
06-21-2005, 07:13 PM
Then we need more bats :wink:
I have two bats which feed in my yard, but I am not sharing.
The world's smallest mammal is the bumblebee bat of Thailand, weighing less than a penny.
Giant flying foxes that live in Indonesia have wingspans of nearly six feet.
The common little brown bat of North America is the world's longest lived mammal for its size, with life-spans sometimes exceeding 32 years.
Mexican free-tailed bats sometimes fly up to two miles high to feed or to catch tail-winds that carry them over long distances at speeds of more than 60 miles per hour.
The pallid bat of western North America is immune to the stings of scorpions and even the seven-inch centipedes upon which it feeds.
Fishing bats have echolocation so sophisticated that they can detect a minnow's fin as fine as a human hair, protruding only two millimeters above a pond's surface.
African heart-nosed bats can hear the footsteps of a beetle walking on sand from a distance of more than six feet.
Red bats that live in tree foliage throughout most of North America can withstand body temperatures as low as 23 degrees F. during winter hibernation.
Tiny woolly bats in West Africa live in the large webs of colonial spiders.
The Honduran white bat is snow white with a yellow nose and ears. It cuts large leaves to make "tents" that protect its small colonies from jungle rains.
Disk-winged bats of Latin America have adhesive disks on both wings and feet that enable them to live in unfurling banana leaves (or even walk up a window pane!).
Frog-eating bats identify edible from poisonous frogs by listening to the mating calls of male frogs. Frogs counter by hiding and using short, difficult to locate calls.
Vampire bats adopt orphans and have been known to risk their lives to share food with less fortunate roost-mates.
Male epauletted bats have pouches in their shoulders which contain large, showy patches of white fur that they flash during courtship to attract mates. Mother Mexican free-tailed bats find and nurse their own young, even in huge colonies where many millions of babies cluster at up to 500 per square foot.
Smiling JOe
06-21-2005, 07:30 PM
I think someone may have gone a little batty. :floor:
RiverOtter
06-21-2005, 07:38 PM
Wonder what this bat eats? :biggrin:
http://www.cnn.com/2003/SHOWBIZ/books/12/11/review.mythology/story.batman.jpg
I think someone may have gone a little batty. :floor:
Bats are my flying cousins. :cool:
BeachDreamer
06-21-2005, 08:32 PM
The one I got covers 1 acre. You put it anywhere you want it & it is easily moved if needed. They kill the insects by attracting them to the machine & trapping them in a net. The machine runs on propane from a gas cylinder like the ones used on grills & it runs all the time. The tank will need changing about every 3 to 4 weeks.
Thanks for the info, JC!! This is a great help.
Do they attract all insects? If so, what will be the effects to other creatures in our environment that rely on these or other insects for their food source? I don't mind swatting a few, but the birds and frogs have to eat too.
I think the bulk of the yellow flies leave about the end of June (just from memory...I am getting old!) but there are always some to be found, just not in droves.
I believe all I've seen in my mosquitoe magnet is yellow flies & mosquitoes. I do not know how the environment is effected (good question) by these machines, I certainly would not want to cause harm to some of the things I enjoy most!
Smiling JOe
06-22-2005, 07:41 PM
I think the bulk of the yellow flies leave about the end of June (just from memory...I am getting old!) but there are always some to be found, just not in droves.
I believe all I've seen in my mosquitoe magnet is yellow flies & mosquitoes. I do not know how the environment is effected (good question) by these machines, I certainly would not want to cause harm to some of the things I enjoy most!
Don't get me wrong. I don't like yellowflies and mosquitos. However, someone mentioned that these machines attract the insects from an area of 43,560+ sq ft. WOW! How big are your lots?
Sometimes we get so wrapped up in our own self interest, that we forget our impact to the environement. Remember back to 7th grade science classes (or was it 3rd grade?) when we learned the food chain? What happens when we destroy the food source for something in the food chain?
Just food for thougt on how we directly affect our environment. Personally, I like to see the frogs, lizards, birds and bats, and other creatures. Everthing in life is linked in some way. Think before you react.
Consider:
Do not kill anything unless it is about to eat you, or you are about to eat it.
If you cannot cut the head off of a bird with feathers, do not buy it neatly wrapped.
It should be natural, not taxing, to show compassion for all living things.
Hendrix is not God, but he might assist you in receiving a glimpse.
Smiling JOe
06-23-2005, 07:09 AM
Consider:
Do not kill anything unless it is about to eat you, or you are about to eat it.
If you cannot cut the head off of a bird with feathers, do not buy it neatly wrapped.
It should be natural, not taxing, to show compassion for all living things.
Hendrix is not God, but he might assist you in receiving a glimpse.
:clap_1: :clap_1: :clap_1:
I would add that If you do not have the heart to cut the head off of any animal, do not buy it neatly wrapped.
--and I am not a vegetarian. :blink:
aquaticbiology
06-23-2005, 09:52 AM
from my own personal june, july, august observations:
kill all the yellow flies/mosquitos you want
- there will be just more bigger ones as thinner population=less competition and better survivability
north wind=yellow flies, south wind = bigger waves
even normal seabreeze can pick up really dry sand and it stings just like tiny little needles when it hits bare skin hard enough
the true proper attire for northwest florida, especially at night, is: over the calf tube socks, sweat pants and a long sleeve hooded t-shirt, all in light gray or white - no skeeters or sunburn
troubled by bees, wasps or yellow jackets? - put out an just-about-empty beer bottle or two (not a can and preferably colorless glass, the cheaper the brand the better it works) slightly away from where you are working, especially when working with any sort of dead fish
too many (black) flies or other buzzy bugs? - hang a zip-lock bag half full of water in your entranceway
the more you water lawns and plants (or rain you get), the more mosquitos you will have, yellow flies come down from cattle country so are not affected by water, in fact they like it dry and hot
dusty
07-04-2005, 09:30 AM
Anyone know the name of the special mosquito/fly repellent that they sell at Watercolor's store? It may come in other forms, but I recall it was in small towellette packets and the towelettes were reusable.
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