Hi Connie, I just received your note about the ePest IPM Bug Trap and wanted to tell you a little bit about how it is used.
All glue traps including ours, are designed to either monitor pest movement or to help capture them. No glue traps are designed to be a sole means of control. They should always be used in combination with a program of sprays, baits, etc. The
ePest IPM Bug trap is also designed to be a low cost, disposable, biodegradeable trap. It is widely used in schools, hospitals, nursing homes, daycare centers and other areas where pesticides are only used as a last resort. In Texas, and also in California, traps like this are required to be used in school buildings as a first line of defense against pests, before pesticides are sprayed indoors. We keep these traps in our offices, and I also use them at home. We capture spiders, roaches, crickets and all sorts of bugs. It almost eliminates the need for spraying indoors. I am not sure what you mean by "did not work" but if you didn't capture anything, then that is simply a matter of relocating the trap or putting it in the right location. Customers actually send me their traps regularly to show me what they captured because they don't know what it is. We can easily identify most pests if they are intact. Others send me traps because they get so excited that they actually caught something. Either way, the ePest IPM Bug Trap should be a part of every home owners arsenal against pests. It's a "green" "non-chemical" pest control tool that only makes good sense. Hope this helps. Ron
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