fruit fly: photo courtesy of Andre' Karwath; wikipedia.org |
- Use or discard all overripe fruit. Leaving fruit left to rot is sending an invitation to fruit flies to breed in your home.
- If possible, clean your fruits and veggies at a makeshift cleaning station outside of your home.
- Cover your fruit bowl or store your fruits in the refrigerator.
- Clean off opened bottles of fruit juice and fermented or vinegar products.
- Don't throw away food scraps in garbage cans inside your home.
- Wash all dishes after use.
- Wash dishrags regularly.
- Wipe up spills and crumbs from counter tops, cabinets, and floors as quickly as possible.
- Take your trash out daily.
- Keep those easy to forget areas around your dishwasher, stove, and refrigerator clean.
- Dump out mop water; clean the pail and mop.
What if you already have fruit flies. Here's some do-it-yourself suggestions that I came across.
- First, remove the source! If you leave the rotting peach on the counter, these tricks are not going to work!
So, it looks like flies like the orange juice bait. Other suggested baits include:
- a piece of rotten fruit in a jar
- wine
- apple cider vinegar
- also, adding a small amount of dish washing detergent to a liquid bait helps to trap the flies
I decided to make another trap using apple cider vinegar. By the end of the weekend there were only 2-3 fruit flies in that one. For us, it wasn't very successful. I did read that heating the cider vinegar releases more of the vinegar fragrance. Maybe I'll try that next time.
However, I must say that the orange juice/white cooking wine combo worked quite well. By the end of the weekend, this is what we had trapped:
We'd love to hear your experiences. If you've tried any of these tricks or maybe even some not mentioned, let us know how they worked for you!
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