Centipedes Coming in the House - What the Heck Am I Supposed to Do?
If centipedes are coming in the house, something needs to be done quick.
I was watching television one night, and I thought I saw something in the corner of my eye.
I thought I saw something move near my clothes hamper.
So naturally I walk over to investigate, curiosity peaked.
I slowly lifted up a towel, and out pops this small reddish object.
It hits the ground and immediately shoots off underneath my bed!
Now that I have a second to think, I remembered what the bug looked like more clearly.
It was worse than any bug I'd ever seen before!
It was deep red, almost bordering on brown. It was long, much longer than three or four spiders combined.
It was quick, I'd never seen a bug move so fast!
I instantly wanted to know how long it lived? I found out anywhere from four to seven years. That's too long!
I wanted to know how to stop the Centipedes from coming into the house.
I wanted to know if they can bite? They can't, however they can sting something fierce, and yes they (usually not dangerously) venomous, like most bees.
I wanted to know how much they reproduced? Turns out that a mature female Centipede lays about 65 eggs on average per year.
I knew I had to keep these creepy Centipedes from coming in my house!
I couldn't afford an exterminator, not for a problem this small, but I had to do something right away!
I wasn't going to lose another nights sleep over bugs, I knew that!
I sealed up all the ways in, to stop Centipedes from coming in the house. You should do this too, as a first step!
Don't leave cracks for the Centipedes to invade your home!
I was watching television one night, and I thought I saw something in the corner of my eye.
I thought I saw something move near my clothes hamper.
So naturally I walk over to investigate, curiosity peaked.
I slowly lifted up a towel, and out pops this small reddish object.
It hits the ground and immediately shoots off underneath my bed!
Now that I have a second to think, I remembered what the bug looked like more clearly.
It was worse than any bug I'd ever seen before!
It was deep red, almost bordering on brown. It was long, much longer than three or four spiders combined.
It was quick, I'd never seen a bug move so fast!
I instantly wanted to know how long it lived? I found out anywhere from four to seven years. That's too long!
I wanted to know how to stop the Centipedes from coming into the house.
I wanted to know if they can bite? They can't, however they can sting something fierce, and yes they (usually not dangerously) venomous, like most bees.
I wanted to know how much they reproduced? Turns out that a mature female Centipede lays about 65 eggs on average per year.
I knew I had to keep these creepy Centipedes from coming in my house!
I couldn't afford an exterminator, not for a problem this small, but I had to do something right away!
I wasn't going to lose another nights sleep over bugs, I knew that!
I sealed up all the ways in, to stop Centipedes from coming in the house. You should do this too, as a first step!
Don't leave cracks for the Centipedes to invade your home!
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