Interesting Things to Know
The Ants Are Back — and They Mean Business
Every spring, like clockwork, they return.
They show up on the kitchen counter, along the windowsill, or marching across the floor in a determined little line toward the crumb you forgot about last Tuesday. Ant season has arrived, and this year’s colony is just as motivated as last year’s.
The good news is that a few simple steps can usually send them packing without an exterminator bill.
Start by sealing the invitation. Ants often enter through tiny cracks, gaps, or openings you may not notice. Check around window frames, doors, baseboards, and the places where pipes or wires enter the house. A small line of caulk can close the door on a big problem.
Next, remove the welcome mat. Ants are usually looking for food or water. Wipe down counters daily, store food in sealed containers, sweep crumbs, empty pet food bowls overnight, and fix dripping faucets. Even a small leak can be enough to keep ants coming back.
Borax bait can also be effective. A mixture of borax and sugar water placed near ant trails attracts worker ants, which carry it back to the colony and share it. That helps reach the nest, not just the ants you see on the counter. Use caution, though: borax should be kept away from children and pets.
Peppermint and vinegar may help, too. Ants rely on scent trails to navigate, and strong smells can disrupt those paths. A spray of diluted white vinegar along entry points or a few drops of peppermint oil on a cotton ball near problem areas can help redirect traffic.
The key is consistency. Killing a few ants on sight may feel satisfying, but it does not solve the problem. Find where they are coming in, remove what they are looking for, and break the trail they are following.
Ants may be persistent, but they are not complicated. Close the gaps, clean the crumbs, and make your kitchen a lot less interesting.





