Опубликована: 10 окт 2011, 15:10
Dangerous! This a bark beetle, which lays the larvae eating a tree!
During the processing of wood all my friends and I who were building saw them flying. The bark beetles. If you are close to the forest there is a lot of them. But I think it's okay, no attempt to lay something was noticed. Have been written somewhere that they are attracted to the smell of a fresh wood. And they also probably need a bark to lay somethimg.. In general, myself like everybody just fogot. No moves haven’t been found yet, although I polished all timbers.
On the subject of treatment instead of chemistry as I think, you can apply a cold and a heat. Previously, people freze out homes and a part of living creatures perished. True it is probably related to mice etc.
Other variant is warming. Take a heat gun, then direct it to the proposed location of infection through the tube, heat a wall to 70-80 degrees. In theory everething should die. I exterminated the larvae by a building foehn in the aspen, although it was not a wall, and I handled a small site. I think at home so it should be completely dried and settled, or cracks will disperse more. By heating they will be accurately created, especially if you heat the ends or the cut sites (grooves, bowls, etc). That's an option – who’s brave, can try it.
During the processing of wood all my friends and I who were building saw them flying. The bark beetles. If you are close to the forest there is a lot of them. But I think it's okay, no attempt to lay something was noticed. Have been written somewhere that they are attracted to the smell of a fresh wood. And they also probably need a bark to lay somethimg.. In general, myself like everybody just fogot. No moves haven’t been found yet, although I polished all timbers.
On the subject of treatment instead of chemistry as I think, you can apply a cold and a heat. Previously, people freze out homes and a part of living creatures perished. True it is probably related to mice etc.
Other variant is warming. Take a heat gun, then direct it to the proposed location of infection through the tube, heat a wall to 70-80 degrees. In theory everething should die. I exterminated the larvae by a building foehn in the aspen, although it was not a wall, and I handled a small site. I think at home so it should be completely dried and settled, or cracks will disperse more. By heating they will be accurately created, especially if you heat the ends or the cut sites (grooves, bowls, etc). That's an option – who’s brave, can try it.