Does anyone know if these moths eat cotton and linen? I have heard they do. I am trying to reduce the food sources in the house to deal with the problem so its less wool, fur and silk with more Lycra clothes !
For anyone with a similar problem, I have found pheromone traps and cedar mothballs are ineffective and seem to attract them.
After moths noshed my best trousers and too much carpet, I have used Pro-Active C and Acana Moth products, we now have had an MFZ (Moth Free Zone) for two weeks.
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That will explain my partner's fur boots getting eaten.
I have started to use Acana Lavender Sachets which seem to work quite well. They do use chemicals, Transfluthrin which breaks down over a few months which means it is not a big long lasting pollutant. Chemicals have to be safe because they are heavily regulated now.
Apparently the problem can be traced back to the Dept of Agriculture which banned insecticide put in carpets when they were manufactured. The Dept of Agriculture has had to call in pest controllers three times to eradicate moths in their offices.
They have eaten an acrylic sweater of mine. Nothing is safe. The only answer is wooden floors and going naked. And get lots of spiders.
That is surprising, it is a man made fibre which I would have thought was safe.
a friend swears by this:
http://totalwardrobecare.co.uk/natural-anti-moth-linen-spray-with-n...
apparently it has saved her antique oriental rugs which were being chomped at.
I'd want to bring me breakfast every morning for £21!!
They will try to eat anything, but a lot of synthetics will kill them trying (so you might get holes, but they'll only do it once. Each.) You also have to remember that it's the larvae that do the munching, not the adult moths, and that the eggs can lie dormant for a very long (months at least) time. I've found that the vacuum cleaner is my best friend with moths. We're not totally moth free, but vacuuming up the eggs and larvae and then making sure the cleaner is clean helps a lot. We would also never buy a wool carpet again...
We used an electric flying insect trap - like this one http://www.amazon.co.uk/ELECTRIC-FLYING-INSECT-KILLER-CATCHER/dp/B0...
It fixed the problem after about 2 weeks and we've not had a problem since. We found it much more effective than the chemical solutions we tried.
I have heard the larvae can be frozen @ -20C for three days or cooked in the Microwave. After eating my jacket, they deserve to suffer !!!
I am now in week three and after using the Liquid C, some fumigant and Acana Lavender pouches, I have not seen a moth for three weeks.
Its definitely the teeny weeny silvery ones here...and no sign of them for three weeks now. ;o)
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