Aspartame kills fire ants … and it also kills you

From the article:

“Fire Ant Remedy – sprinkle a packet of aspartame (Equal or NutraSweet) on the mound. Ants will be gone the next day. Anyone eating or drinking anything containing this stuff is nuts!”


Organic Fire Ant Control

fire-ants

Common Name – Fire Ant, Imported Fire Ant, Red Imported Fire Ant

Scientific Name – Order – Hymenoptera, Family – Formicidae, Solenopsis invicta

Body Length – Adults are about 1/12″ to 1/3″

Identification – Four fire ant species are found in Texas. Three are native. The imported fire ant has just about wiped out the natives. The imported fire ant builds its mounds out in the open. Mounds have no visible openings. Stings are painful and sometimes produce a unique white pustule.

Biology/Life Cycle – Colonies consist of the brood and several types of adults; winged males, winged females, one or more queens and workers which are wingless. The brood is made up of cream colored eggs, larvae and pupae. The reproductive winged forms are most prevalent in spring and summer. Mating flights usually happen between April and June. Males die after mating. A queen in a large colony is capable of producing her own weight in eggs every day (1,500 or more). A typical mature fire ant colony will contain 80,000 workers, but some mounds contain as many as 240,000 workers. Queens can live 5 years or more.

Habitat – Almost any soil but prefers open, sunny areas such as pastures, parks, lawns, meadows and cultivated fields. They will also infest the vegetable garden. They love eggplant, okra, cabbage and broccoli. Fire ants do not like biodiversity. Feeding Habits: They are omnivorous and will feed on almost any animal or plant. They eat other insects, oils, sugars and young seedlings and saplings. Economic Importance: Tremendous economic problem due to electrical device damage. They also can injure baby animals. They do have a beneficial side. They control by eating ticks, chiggers, termites, boll weevils, fleahoppers, cotton bollworms, pink bollworms, tobacco budworms, pecan weevils, hickory shuckworms, flies, fleas, cockroaches, and corn earworms. They are beneficial predators when existing in controlled numbers.

Natural Control – Lizards, birds, other insects and microorganisms. Compost tea, and beneficial nematodes. Beneficial microorganisms in the compost tea and in the gut of nematodes seem to be doing the actually control. Laboratory tests have shown that the beneficial fungus Beauveria bassiana is effective against fire ants.

Organic Control – Drench with the fire ant control formula – compost tea/molasses/citrus oil. The commercial product is called Garden-Ville Fire Ant Control. Many gardeners report good results with instant grits, Malt-o-Meal and other instant break fast cereals. Spraying products that contain molasses helps keep them away. Apply beneficial microorganisms. Laboratory tests have shown that the beneficial fungus Beauveria bassiana is effective against fire ants.
Treatment of Stings – Treat the stings with vinegar, baking soda, orange oil or comfrey. If you are highly allergic, get to a doctor.

FIRE ANT CONTROL – THE NATURAL WAY

Neither toxic poisons nor chemical growth regulators are necessary to control fire ants. The concept of A&M’s new two step recommendation has one fatal flaw. It doesn’t work. It’s the same program that has been being used for years, and fire ants still rule. I know – used to use that program myself. The so-called “Earth-Kind” approach is to treat the site with baits then the mounds with contact poisons. The specific recommendations are to douse the mounds with the toxic chemicals like Orthene, an acephate that is water soluble. This and other lab-created poisons such as diazinon, Dursban and malathion are contaminating our soil and water supply. The baits, Logic and Award, are now listed by the EPA as probable carcinogens.

A totally organic approach works better and creates no contamination to the user, the soil, the air or the water. To control fire ants and other pests like fleas, termites, chinch bugs, ticks, crickets and grasshoppers, try this. It won’t hurt you and you’ll see great results.

Step 1: Spray the site with Garrett Juice plus orange oil or d-limonene at 2 ounces per gallon of spray. Homemade citrus oil can be made by soaking citrus peelings in an equal amount of water for 10 days to two weeks. Adding garlic-pepper tea makes the spray even more powerful. This same spray will also help control aphids, white flies, and mosquitoes. It will also kill beneficials so don’t use unless pests are a problem and don’t use more than the recommended rates of any of the citrus concentrates or risk burning plant foliage or even killing plants.

Step 2: Treat mounds with a drench of manure compost tea, molasses and citrus oil. Commercial products are available that contain these ingredients. The homemade concentrate includes equal parts of compost tea, molasses and orange oil. Use 4-6 ounces of concentrate per gallon of water. Commercial products include Garden-Ville Fire Ant Control (Soil Conditioner) and GreenSense Soil Drench.

Step 3: Apply beneficial nematodes on problem areas. Be sure to apply these living organisms within the date deadline. They do have a shelf life.

Step 4: Spray the site at least monthly with Garrett Juice which is a mixture of manure compost tea, seaweed, natural vinegar and molasses. Long term this is the only step necessary.

Not only does this program get rid of fire ants, they usually stay gone. Recommendations by Michael Bosco:
Preventative maintenance

There are steps that can be taken to reduce the competitive edge of fire ants and as part of an overall organic program to control fire ants.

1. Increase biodiversity Fire ants are more of a problem in new neighborhoods than in older neighborhoods, where there is a more stabilized ecosystem. When fire ants are forced to compete they become less of a problem. We must do our part to encourage nature.

2. Treating the lawn spring and fall with nematodes Treat after sunset and follow-up with ½ inch of irrigation. Nematodes are live microscopic worms and need to be applied at the highest recommended rate and in a manor to ensure their survival.

Individual Mound Treatment

3. Treat individual mounds with 1-1/2 ounces of citrus and a few drops of soap as a wetting agent per gallon of water. Treat each mound with one gallon of diluted mixture.

Large area Treatment Program or Bad Infestations

4. When large areas have bad infestations of fire ants, the next step up from the nematodes and citrus drench is applying baits on the whole property at 1-1/2 lb. per acre and one teaspoon of bait per mound. The baits we recommend are the ones containing abamectin because it is derived from a soil microorganism. At low concentrations abamectin acts as an insect growth regulator and when used on individual mounds it is a stomach poison. Baiting should be done in the spring and fall during times of active ant foraging. Test the timing and the bait’s palpability by applying a small amount to individual mounds and watch for a quick uptake. For mounds along sidewalks, house foundations etc. bait is normally required to get effective control, because the ant colony is protected under the concrete.

5. The next step up from the abamectin baits is the chemical growth regulators. These products do not kill ants, they obstruct their life cycle. This process is slow and should be looked at as a low toxic method to decreasing fire ant populations on large properties over a period of several months. Extinguish is a product that has demonstrated good results. As with most baits it is best used in the spring and fall when ants are actively foraging.

Ant Tip
To move a mound of these beneficial ants, cover it with shredded mulch. The ants will relocate to a spot where the opening to the mound is again in full sun.

Fire Ant Remedy – sprinkle a packet of aspartame (Equal or Nutra Sweet) on the mound. Ants will be gone the next day. Anyone eating or drinking anything containing this stuff is nuts!

Source: The Dirt Doctor

Now (June 22, 2011) I’ve decided to insert the following links, because Aspartame really is a lethal poison.

And there are studies that show that it causes cancer (among other negative health effects).

More on excitotoxins and Aspartame:

Food: The Ultimate Secret Exposed

NutraSweet’s ‘Neotame’, Even More Toxic Than Aspartame, Requires NO Food Labeling In USDA Certified Organic Food

EPA List of Dangerous Chemicals Includes Aspartame

Study: Aspartame Induces Lung And Liver Cancer

Dr. Russell Blaylock: Hidden Sources Of MSG In Foods (Flashback)

Aspartame rebranded as ‘AminoSweet’

Aspartame: Sweet Misery – A Poisoned World (Documentary)

Venezuela bans Coke Zero, cites “dangers to health”

Aspartame kills fire ants … and it also kills you

Aspartame Study: 67% of Female Rats Developed Visible Tumors

MSG: Causes obesity, is toxic and destroys your brain

Your Food is Toxic and Makes You Sick, Dr. Russell Blaylock, MD

Supermarket Bans Aspartame From Own-Label Products

Interview with Dr. Russell Blaylock on devastating health effects of MSG, aspartame and excitotoxins

Chemical Additives – Are They Slowly Killing Our Children?

8 thoughts on “Aspartame kills fire ants … and it also kills you”

  1. doesnt it make more sense that the lack of calories is what is killing the ants? They are exclusively eating the artifical sweetener and die for a lack or proper nutrition. I think if anyone ate only sweetener we would all die but not for the reasons people are saying online!

    Reply
  2. See Health Canada re: artifical sweeteners.
    By this same logic we all need to stop eating chocolate since it is a well know fact it makes dogs ill and if they eat too much death.

    Reply
  3. Die from lack of nutrients within 24 hours?? Ah come on think about that. ACCEPT THE TRUTH THIS SHIT IS KILLING EVERYONE AND CAUSING HEALTH ISSUES UNLIKE EVER BEFORE!!!! One of these artificial sweeteners, I forget which one, is one chemical element off from being a fertilizer, maybe even one we banned. Please do some research…it won’t take much time..to learn you will not find anything good about these artificial toxins. I challenge you. Find something that is beneficial and positive, something good for you about these artificial sweeteners. You can’t do it.

    Reply
  4. H20 is water
    H202 is hydrogen peroxide.
    Should we all stop drinking water since they are one chemical bond of hydrogen off?
    That is one example in millions of chemical formulas. I am in health care….i know that people should worry about preventing heart attacks and strokes…..
    if you dont want to eat artifical sweetners, then dont. But dont spread false fear inducing info to others who chose to.

    Reply

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