Amdro's Ant Stakes Review: Are My Ants Smarter Than Average?

91

By mskills

Uh oh, the temperature is warming up and the rain clouds are hanging out over my house. Guess what that means: Ants. I know, my heart should ache for their unceasing labors to aerate my lawn and serve as dinner for the monstrous spiders that roam around my foundation. But year after year of frustrating home invasions have forced me to introduce the little buggers to my friends Ortho and Raid.

Unfortunately, my wife no longer shares my enthusiasm for the insecticide apocalypse. Now that I have two very young children who are fascinated with eating anything that they can find off of the floor, I've been forcibly coerced to shelve the big guns. Not willing to give up the fight, however, I turned to the omniscient internet for advice. The answer: Amdro's Ant Stakes (also known as Grant's Ant Stakes).

Why stakes? How do they work?

The Amdro Ant Stakes are marketed as being usable both indoors and out. Thus, I deducted that if I were to plant them around the outside of the house, I'd both appease the wife and save the children from possible harm. Appropriately named, the plastic stakes can be inserted into the ground or laid flat with the bait hole facing upwards.

The entire purpose of the Ant Stakes, however, is to attract ants into the hole of death. When they were marketed as Grant's, the bait hole contained arsenic, a poison that causes all sorts of nasty symptoms if ingested. Now, the active ingredient is hydramethylnon, not nearly as toxic to humans but surely strong enough to KO a creature no larger than a grain of rice, right? According to Amdro, the bait is supposedly weak enough to allow the ant to bring it back to the colony and ultimately assassinate the queen.

Amdro Kills Ants: Ha ha ha
Amdro Kills Ants: Ha ha ha
Source: Amdro

Supposedly? Something doesn't sound right

Following the relatively simple directions of Amdro's Ant Stakes (remove from box and insert into ground), I eagerly awaited the army of darkness with open arms ... and waited ... and waited. In fact, after checking the stakes every few hours for signs of activity, I convinced myself that everything would be better in the morning -- I was wrong.

The stakes have been standing guard around my house for a week now. Like silent sentinels with frightening gargoyle faces, they have done a wonderful job at intimidating intruders. The problem, however, is that the ants are just running around the stakes and continuing on their merry way into my kitchen.

Surely you are doing something wrong

Perhaps I am an idiot. The instructions, which seemed so foolproof when I first popped open the box, must be hiding the crucial key to success from my eyes. The ants just don't care about the bait inside these stakes. Maybe it doesn't smell good. Possibly the stakes are too slippery. Whatever the reason, Amdro's Ant Stakes might as well have "WMDs inside. Stay out!" marked in whatever language ants read (pheromones?) all around them.

Thinking that the problem was dietary, I traced a path of honey and syrup up the stakes and into the bait hole. Within minutes, the stakes were overwhelmed with sugar-loving arthropods. Outsmarting them at last, I retired for another day only to find something very curious the next morning: The honey was entirely gone. The ants, on the other hand, were back to work on my linoleum.

So did you ever get rid of the ants?

In the end, I resorted to the insecticides that I had tried so vainly to avoid. Only on the outside of the house, mind you, in order to compromise. I know they won't be as effective thanks to rainfall, but at least the ants are gone for now.

As for Amdro's Ant Stakes: I've left them up around the perimeter of the house. Maybe a potential thief will see them and mistake them for a fancy infrared alarm system.

Comments

CASE1WORKER profile image

CASE1WORKER Level 6 Commenter 12 months ago

I don't think we have the ant problem that you have in the US but honestly I found this article really entertaining and I know that should we get little visitors i will be inspecting local brands of ant sticks- well done

mskills profile image

mskills Hub Author 12 months ago

@CASE1WORKER,

It gets warm very quickly in North Carolina, and the spring rains drive the ants crazy. No matter what I do to prevent them from coming inside each year, the ants just keep coming back for more.

Thanks for reading!

wilderness profile image

wilderness Level 6 Commenter 12 months ago

Well written, informative and humorous at the same time. Well done.

Each year I fight the ants as well; our grandchildren leave crumbs and food in our sunroom and the ants love them for it. Like you, I resort to chemicals placed around the foundation and door. I've also been know to find a nest and burn it out if it won't destroy the yard.

mskills profile image

mskills Hub Author 12 months ago

@wilderness,

It's funny contemplating the progression over the past few years since we moved into our house.

The first year, my wife was pregnant with our first child and there were absolutely no sign of ants trying to invade.

Each year since has introduced more and new varieties of ant for me to curse at, Google, and destroy. Thanks kids (expressed in a sarcastic but also loving way.)

Nest hunting sounds intriguing. Time to go do some research ...

LuisEGonzalez profile image

LuisEGonzalez Level 7 Commenter 12 months ago

Very creative for such a simple topic. I used to have a similar problem. I sprinkled some minute amounts of powered sugar into the opening of the Amdro traps, and it seemed to do the trick.

mskills profile image

mskills Hub Author 12 months ago

@LuisEGonzalez,

You know, sprinkling sugar into the bait holes makes so much sense that I can't believe I didn't try it. Now I know what I'll do first when I get home from work today!

LuisEGonzalez profile image

LuisEGonzalez Level 7 Commenter 12 months ago

Try powered instead of coarse and rub a tiny amount onto the body of the trap. They will seek the sugar.

Remember to use a little bit, the object is to lure them into entering the trap.

Mark Ewbie profile image

Mark Ewbie Level 7 Commenter 12 months ago

Nicely done, interesting, amusing, and informative. Maybe the angle of how you tried other things but the Amdro Ant Stakes were the best you have ever come across would generate a few more sales.

mskills profile image

mskills Hub Author 12 months ago

@LuisEGonzalez,

Will do. Glad to see you've had luck with these things, because I was pretty peeved when I wrote this hub.

@Mark Ewbie,

Thank you for the kind words. I'll need to work on my slant for future reviews, since I don't think I'm doing Amdro or my Adsense clicks a great service with such a negative hub.

johndwilliams profile image

johndwilliams 12 months ago

Great Hub keep up the good work :)

mskills profile image

mskills Hub Author 12 months ago

@johndwilliams,

Glad you enjoyed it!

RussellLHuey profile image

RussellLHuey 8 months ago

Entertaining hub, mskills.

RIff 3 weeks ago

I've always used Grant's in the past and it's worked just fine. This is my first year using Amdros and it's not doing anything. The ants could care less about the bait.

Carrie 6 days ago

I have 16 Amdro ant killing stakes around my yard and have not seen one ant go in to any of them. They happily eat my newly planted cherry trees and have made a playground out of my backyard. My husband and I are convinced we are living on an actual ant hill. Literally. I think unless we start tossing mini bombs in to the nests and start having cookouts in their ant holes we are not going to get rid of these pesky critters. To top it off they are red ants and my poor mom got bitten trying to make a flower garden. My husband went and bought ant killer granules and a spreader and has now attacked them in this way. Thank you for your hilarious story and thank you all for postings suggestions!

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