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How do YOU do it?

How do you get rid of fruit flies?

There are a number of techniques that people have come up with. One that's pretty effective is to put out a small bowl of vinegar and add a few drops of dish soap to it. I've found that the vinegar will lure some fruit flies, but not all. And all you need are a few to hang around and breed, restarting the colony.

The most effective technique I've found that works when there's a lot of flies is a bit of a manual effort, but it pays off. Find a tall glass and drop in bits of fruit into the bottom. Maybe 1" tall of fruit debris. Banana is an excellent lure, and so are strawberries. You leave out the glass on the counter for about a half hour. When you come back to it, you'll see flies inside and on the fruit. But there are some who camp-out on the rim. I don't know why they do this... maybe a lookout for danger. Who knows. Anyway, bring one hand up by the side where most are on the rim. Then quickly bring your hand down on the glass while using your other hand to support it. Usually a good many of the flies on the rim will flee "across" the glass and then get trapped by your hand. Another technique is to use plastic wrap with both hands and come down from above. The flies don't notice the plastic as easily as a human hand. Once covered, bring the glass over to the kitchen sink. Using a flexible faucet or a glass full of water, pour water into the trap glass from a slight opening. Be sure the opening stays small. Once the glass is about 3/4 full, take away the water and recover simultaneously. Now shake the glass vigorously. Do it a few times. The fruit flies will be stunned. They will still craw around trying to get out of the water, but they're partly disabled. Next, spray inside the glass with glass cleaner (ammonia based). This will kill them in a minute or two. Once they're vanquished, pour out the water (the flies usually come along with it), rinse the glass, place the bait back in it, and set the trap again.

Using this technique I've been able to vanquish a large colony of fruit flies within about 4 cycles. I really don't enjoy doing this, but they're pests and they reproduce so prolifically... it's not like you're going to make a dent on their existence in the world.

The best way to reduce fruit flies from proliferating to begin with is to use a very fine strainer lined with paper towels to hold the fruit, then cover over with fine breathable cloth. This keeps fruit flies from invading your bowl of fruit. Of course, many times they come in via purchased fruit, so you have to keep an eye out to see if any start appearing. After the 1st day of buying new fruit, if there are no fruit flies then you're generally good.
 
I use the vinegar method rather successfully, but it works best with apple cider vinegar and 2-3 of dishes of the mixture scattered through the kitchen. Wrapping the dish with plastic wrap with a few tiny slits cut into the wrap helps, too.
 
I use the good old fly paper. And a piece of overripe fruit or veggie under it, as bait.
Sorry, but...
Who the hell can afford that many bras?!? :lol:
Can't see the pic atm (I'm at my office and the firewall blocks all images) but I have a whole drawer full. Only 4 or 5 were mine, originally. I literally inherited a lot of rather pretty ones from my aunt (coincidentially, we have the same size).
I usually fold them in half, fold the straps and the upper half of the cups down and then roll them up and keep them together with rubber band. But that looks a bit untidy and so I'm searching for something better. I wonder: is there a military way? While I'm civilian, the army does indeed have pretty good tricks when it comes to folding things very small and making it still look tidy.

These pomatoes are not a bad idea for small gardens =) But my prob is that I have enough space to grow them only I have such a huge crop this year that I need ways to preserve them. My freezer is full to the brim and I coudn't even squeeze a raspberry in, let alone some 10 lbs of tomatos per week.
 
Eliminating Telemarketers Phone Calls
The old reverse obscene phone call got me on several do not call lists. When they phone just grunt a lot and ask "what are you wearing?!??!"

Removal of email Spammers
I collected the emails addresses of about 500 of them then sold the list to another email spammer.

Doorbell religious conversion
Appear as a slightly confused human, listen briefly, then twitch nervously and say in a loud clear voice: "I have a message for you: SATAN SATAN SATAN" ...then slam the door.

....Plan B for all of those is to panic and resort to cannibalism....on the whole i think I'm being rather co-operative.
 
Improvement of Any and All deserts:

Dump 1 shot of rum on it. Consume.

...so far, 100% success rate.
 
Eliminating Telemarketers Phone Calls
The old reverse obscene phone call got me on several do not call lists. When they phone just grunt a lot and ask "what are you wearing?!??!"

Tom Mabe is the best at pranking telemarketers.

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Survival of long tedious boring work tasks:

I play this in the background as I work:

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Improvement of Any and All deserts:

Dump 1 shot of rum on it. Consume.

...so far, 100% success rate.
For a non-alcoholic way, try spray-on whipped cream. It'll punch up the allure of any dessert, especially if you top it with some cut strawberries or raspberries.
 
Inspired by this thread, the other day I opened a banana from the non-stem end.

It didn't work right. :shrug:

Kor
You didn't do it right. :razz:

Skip to 1m:
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You can do the pinch move, or just make a little slit like you would from the stem end. The peels will roll back easier from the bottom end.
 
Tom Mabe is the best at pranking telemarketers.

Have you seen the James Veitch TEDTalk videos where he replies to spam emails?

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does anyone happen to know how to remove peach stains from white cotton? I've tried really every trick I know but the stain is stubborn.
 
very helpful links. Thank you!
Unfortunately, I've tried everything already :( Maybe a combination of several methods might do the trick :)
 
very helpful links. Thank you!
Unfortunately, I've tried everything already :( Maybe a combination of several methods might do the trick :)
Stain removal on cotton is very time sensitive. The second the stain occurs, you need to get that fabric under cold running water. Sparkling water (carbonated) can be helpful too. Usually a little dish soap rubbed in will help get the stain out at that point, if the fabric isn't very delicate.

There are numerous stain removal products out there. I've found they range from somewhat effective to ineffective, so I can't really recommend any one in particular.

For a natural approach:
Saturate set-in stains with vinegar, then rub the spot with a paste made from equal parts vinegar and baking soda. You can add a couple tablespoons each of vinegar and laundry detergent to a bucket of water and soak the garment overnight, if the stain persists. Then, rinse and wash. Of course, you may want to test this out on a small part of the garment not usually visible when worn just to be sure of how it affects the color.
 
Fair enough. But the crucial question is "button then zip" or "zip then button"? For me, it's the former.

Depends on which is harder to do. If harder to zip, then button first. If harder to button, zip first.


Squeezing the toothpaste tube
Don't know if this is how everyone does it, but thought I'd put it in here anyway. Squeeze the toothpaste tube from the bottom (the end furthest away from the opening), and keep doing that till one day the tube is empty. This would avoid random squishes in your tube which makes it hard to remove the paste at the bottom when it is almost empty.
 
yep, that's the best way with all tubes. And to milk out the last drop you can either simply pull it over the sharp edge of a table or use one of these handy tube squeezers.

@Gary7 that's an idea! I've not yet tried the good old baking soda & vinegar trick =)
 
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