Author Topic: how da forget do I get rid of fruit flies???  (Read 5989 times)


turn off the lights man
Yeah turn all the lights out and light a candle so they all run into the flame.

offer your soul to the Lord of the Flies

You don't.

Fruit Flies
Get
Rid
Of
YOU


You must eat them to gain their powers.


fruitflies are the easiest insects to kill, especially if there's a lot of them.
just trap them between your hands by clapping and they'll die.

Yeah turn all the lights out and light a candle so they all run into the flame.
They'll still be living matches and will start a house fire, and house fires are horrible.

Try dousing yourself with repellent so they won't land on you as you Raid the sink with 40k kelvin hot water turned on 24/7


Always keep the plug on the sink when you're not using it, and kill the rest.
Should work...
oh wait, they mate and it doesn't anymore.
Get an upside down bottle, and somehow tape a banana peel on top. Dispose of flies regularly.
Or you could use a vacuum cleaner, and just you-should-guess-what-or-you're-stupid.

Fruit flies xD
I remember having a similar problem with regular house flies, some got in the house while we were on a 2 week trip out of the country. When we got back we went on a fly massacre.

If you take some apple cider and some vinegar, and mix it in a small glass, they should land in there and want the cider, but the vinegar then kills them. It always worked for me, I remember in a day I had about 15 to 20 flies in there.

Are they tarantulahawks?
Klitzkrieg 3 foot Tarantulahornethawkvultures Warrior Wizards

Quote
When a hornet approaches the hive to release pheromones, the bee workers emerge from their hive in an angry cloud-formation with some 500 individuals. As they form a tight ball around the hornet, the ball increases in heat to 47 °C (117 °F) from their vibrating wings, forming a convection oven as the heat released by the bees' bodies is spread over the hornets. Because bees can survive higher temperatures of 48 to 50 °C (118 to 122 °F) compared to the hornet from 44 to 46 °C (111 to 115 °F), the latter dies.

+1 for regular japanese bees.