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	<title>Comments on: The Bug Man Cometh</title>
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	<description>The Blog for Travelers, Retirees, Expats and anyone who needs to know the REAL Costa Rica.</description>
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		<title>By: Levi</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-17005</link>
		<dc:creator>Levi</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Dec 2009 21:24:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-17005</guid>
		<description>Okay can anyone tell me where I can find Borax powder here in Costa Rica?   I live in Perez Zeledon, near San Isidro del General.   I really need some of that stuff.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Okay can anyone tell me where I can find Borax powder here in Costa Rica?   I live in Perez Zeledon, near San Isidro del General.   I really need some of that stuff.</p>
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		<title>By: Ken</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-15073</link>
		<dc:creator>Ken</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Jan 2009 19:32:46 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-15073</guid>
		<description>Hello, 
This is a moving question: 
Does anyone know the current tax status on personal goods shipped into CR. I do know about the cars but not other persoal goods. There had been an exemption for NA residents to move goods in and buy &#039;one time&#039; tax free large ticket items but this has been discontinued as I understand it...many, many hyears ago. Thank you.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hello,<br />
This is a moving question:<br />
Does anyone know the current tax status on personal goods shipped into CR. I do know about the cars but not other persoal goods. There had been an exemption for NA residents to move goods in and buy &#8216;one time&#8217; tax free large ticket items but this has been discontinued as I understand it&#8230;many, many hyears ago. Thank you.</p>
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		<title>By: Pau</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-13749</link>
		<dc:creator>Pau</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 03 Dec 2008 22:04:00 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-13749</guid>
		<description>Oh God. BUGS. I&#039;m actually Costa Rican and I&#039;ll never deny the bug things. I actually thought it was worse than in any other place I had been (and I&#039;ve lived in Guatemala as well, and the &quot;abejones de mayo&quot; (june bugs) rain around semana santa, it&#039;s quite disgusting).Then I moved to Valencia, Venezuela and wow... I was left completely speechless. Yeah I&#039;m sweet-blooded but it&#039;s just crazy here. Mosquitoes here are killers, they will go through your clothes so no jeans won&#039;t save you. And the roaches here are twice as big as back home. I mean they can move their heads, it&#039;s was very creepy. But anyways I feel your pain with the whole ants thing, I&#039;ve always have had to battle them in my house. It&#039;s pretty crazy, they&#039;ll make these HUGE paths. I&#039;ll see one in my living room and will follow it around and I&#039;ll find where they go into upstairs in my bedroom or computer room. It&#039;s quite impressive.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Oh God. BUGS. I&#8217;m actually Costa Rican and I&#8217;ll never deny the bug things. I actually thought it was worse than in any other place I had been (and I&#8217;ve lived in Guatemala as well, and the &#8220;abejones de mayo&#8221; (june bugs) rain around semana santa, it&#8217;s quite disgusting).Then I moved to Valencia, Venezuela and wow&#8230; I was left completely speechless. Yeah I&#8217;m sweet-blooded but it&#8217;s just crazy here. Mosquitoes here are killers, they will go through your clothes so no jeans won&#8217;t save you. And the roaches here are twice as big as back home. I mean they can move their heads, it&#8217;s was very creepy. But anyways I feel your pain with the whole ants thing, I&#8217;ve always have had to battle them in my house. It&#8217;s pretty crazy, they&#8217;ll make these HUGE paths. I&#8217;ll see one in my living room and will follow it around and I&#8217;ll find where they go into upstairs in my bedroom or computer room. It&#8217;s quite impressive.</p>
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		<title>By: Julie</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-13224</link>
		<dc:creator>Julie</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jul 2008 23:12:16 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-13224</guid>
		<description>Thanks for the pic, Tim!
We brought back a &quot;guest&quot; once from Costa Rica - a nice big black cockroach (not solid black tho, and not shiny). I was kinda hoping this was the one you talked about, but no. Ours didn&#039;t mind the light, moved pretty slowly, and seemed to die out after a few months. We did see a couple of babies, but then they to were gone.
I tried looking them up on the web, but the focus is all on German cockroaches and other known nasty ones.
Some day I&#039;m gonna take a lot of pics of all the different bugs. I spent my first month in Orosi constantly asking &quot;is this a good bug or a bad bug?&quot; The normal answer from Ticas was &quot;not bad,&quot; from Gringos, the answer was &quot;if it&#039;s in the house, it&#039;s bad.&quot; :D
Julie</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thanks for the pic, Tim!<br />
We brought back a &#8220;guest&#8221; once from Costa Rica &#8211; a nice big black cockroach (not solid black tho, and not shiny). I was kinda hoping this was the one you talked about, but no. Ours didn&#8217;t mind the light, moved pretty slowly, and seemed to die out after a few months. We did see a couple of babies, but then they to were gone.<br />
I tried looking them up on the web, but the focus is all on German cockroaches and other known nasty ones.<br />
Some day I&#8217;m gonna take a lot of pics of all the different bugs. I spent my first month in Orosi constantly asking &#8220;is this a good bug or a bad bug?&#8221; The normal answer from Ticas was &#8220;not bad,&#8221; from Gringos, the answer was &#8220;if it&#8217;s in the house, it&#8217;s bad.&#8221; <img src='http://blog.therealcostarica.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_biggrin.gif' alt=':D' class='wp-smiley' /><br />
Julie</p>
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		<title>By: Sandi Hummer</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-13222</link>
		<dc:creator>Sandi Hummer</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 10 Jul 2008 17:14:58 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-13222</guid>
		<description>We live out in the country, so bugs and all sorts of critters are a constant.  We&#039;ve had a bat on our back porch, hanging on our screen door (it had a tiny hole in it&#039;s wing, tarantulas jumping on the same screen door, and one night I woke up to a skunk just outside our bedroom window and couldn&#039;t jump out of bed fast enough, the smell was so strong it was gagging us, we closed the window and had to laugh at this on.  We&#039;ve had angry bears (it&#039;s cub had been hit and killed on the highway),with it roaring, half a football field from our house, but it&#039;s footprints were all around our place the next morning, it sounding like a diesel truck going through its gears.  

So... much of what Costa Rica has going on is not going to be a shock.  The only thing I have concerns about is illneses flys and mosquitos can spread. Then there&#039;s scorpians and snakes.  Those are my concern.  How are they on the West Coast,on the Guanacaste Penisula?  If we are a couple of miles back in, down past Samara, how is it in that location for posionous snakes?  

The place we are wanting is thick with growth, it has a spring, and we will be building ourselves.  It had been cleared at one time, however now it&#039;s been reclaimed by all sorts of vegetation and we&#039;re wondering just what we might encounter in that location.  I have a loss of feeling in my left foot and if anything were to bite me me or sting me on it, I wouldn&#039;t know right away, so that&#039;s a concern, not a great one, but something I need to think about.  I know wearing a pair of rubber boots while we clear out some things is something I will need to do.  

We&#039;ve only known of one rattlesnake here on our property, and we think it came in on a car as a hitchiker, as it&#039;s the only one anyone has ever seen here.  It was striking at our neighbor. He had his shovel with him and killed it.

If we are going to need auxillary electric power, should we bring a generator with us, or should we buy one down there? Also, how is the best way to use spring water?  Can we tap down into one without going very deep to put in a pump without having to install a cistern or a tank?  We don&#039;t want tanks or cisterns if we can avoid it.  We had a cistern in Oregon, they&#039;re a hassle to say the least.  Submersible pumps should work with direct lines to the house, shouldn&#039;t they?  I know that oftentimes they need to be hooked up to a presure tank, which would be ok, but a cistern is not something we want to end up with.  

One fellow who is wanting to buy our ranch wants to throw in a fairly new Ford Diesel crew cab, larger then most, can&#039;t remember the model name, and we hear the tariffs are really high, and now with fuel costs hitting such highs, what is happening with diesel in Costa Rica?  I hear there are movements which are trying to get the C.R. government to do away with the higher taxes on diesel fuel, or at least roll them back.  what do you hear?  What&#039;s up with that?  Would we be wise to have anything which runs on diesel?  Is it a fuel which is readily available, etc?

Also, with the your weather being so constant, with &quot;two seasons&quot;, as a Tico friend of our daughter tells her, saying there&#039;s summer and the rainy season, so, do plants still have their dormant season?  Say like tomato&#039;s, squash, etc, or like flower  bulb plants, perennial flowers, and annuals such as zennias, daisy&#039;s, etc. We have definate seasons here where we are due to how very cold it gets.

About crime, we live out in the country, and crime in our area has been surprising and extremely violent.  I mean people have died, people we knew, their murderers had prowled here at our place.  Then too, we&#039;ve had things stolen out of our pickup,while in town, and our neigbors have been burgalarized several times.  We had a Columbian on our place looking for a neighbor who was one of their dealers down in Hollywood, so we realize that crime is everywhere, Costa Rica doesn&#039;t have a monopoly on it, in fact, you are  probably more crime free than we are, more crime free than most states, counties and cities here in the U.S.

OK, back to bugs, we expect them and they&#039;re the least of what concerns us.  Electricity, water and navigable roads are what I wonder about.  We&#039;ve had our prolems with the last three right here, and that can become a big problem.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We live out in the country, so bugs and all sorts of critters are a constant.  We&#8217;ve had a bat on our back porch, hanging on our screen door (it had a tiny hole in it&#8217;s wing, tarantulas jumping on the same screen door, and one night I woke up to a skunk just outside our bedroom window and couldn&#8217;t jump out of bed fast enough, the smell was so strong it was gagging us, we closed the window and had to laugh at this on.  We&#8217;ve had angry bears (it&#8217;s cub had been hit and killed on the highway),with it roaring, half a football field from our house, but it&#8217;s footprints were all around our place the next morning, it sounding like a diesel truck going through its gears.  </p>
<p>So&#8230; much of what Costa Rica has going on is not going to be a shock.  The only thing I have concerns about is illneses flys and mosquitos can spread. Then there&#8217;s scorpians and snakes.  Those are my concern.  How are they on the West Coast,on the Guanacaste Penisula?  If we are a couple of miles back in, down past Samara, how is it in that location for posionous snakes?  </p>
<p>The place we are wanting is thick with growth, it has a spring, and we will be building ourselves.  It had been cleared at one time, however now it&#8217;s been reclaimed by all sorts of vegetation and we&#8217;re wondering just what we might encounter in that location.  I have a loss of feeling in my left foot and if anything were to bite me me or sting me on it, I wouldn&#8217;t know right away, so that&#8217;s a concern, not a great one, but something I need to think about.  I know wearing a pair of rubber boots while we clear out some things is something I will need to do.  </p>
<p>We&#8217;ve only known of one rattlesnake here on our property, and we think it came in on a car as a hitchiker, as it&#8217;s the only one anyone has ever seen here.  It was striking at our neighbor. He had his shovel with him and killed it.</p>
<p>If we are going to need auxillary electric power, should we bring a generator with us, or should we buy one down there? Also, how is the best way to use spring water?  Can we tap down into one without going very deep to put in a pump without having to install a cistern or a tank?  We don&#8217;t want tanks or cisterns if we can avoid it.  We had a cistern in Oregon, they&#8217;re a hassle to say the least.  Submersible pumps should work with direct lines to the house, shouldn&#8217;t they?  I know that oftentimes they need to be hooked up to a presure tank, which would be ok, but a cistern is not something we want to end up with.  </p>
<p>One fellow who is wanting to buy our ranch wants to throw in a fairly new Ford Diesel crew cab, larger then most, can&#8217;t remember the model name, and we hear the tariffs are really high, and now with fuel costs hitting such highs, what is happening with diesel in Costa Rica?  I hear there are movements which are trying to get the C.R. government to do away with the higher taxes on diesel fuel, or at least roll them back.  what do you hear?  What&#8217;s up with that?  Would we be wise to have anything which runs on diesel?  Is it a fuel which is readily available, etc?</p>
<p>Also, with the your weather being so constant, with &#8220;two seasons&#8221;, as a Tico friend of our daughter tells her, saying there&#8217;s summer and the rainy season, so, do plants still have their dormant season?  Say like tomato&#8217;s, squash, etc, or like flower  bulb plants, perennial flowers, and annuals such as zennias, daisy&#8217;s, etc. We have definate seasons here where we are due to how very cold it gets.</p>
<p>About crime, we live out in the country, and crime in our area has been surprising and extremely violent.  I mean people have died, people we knew, their murderers had prowled here at our place.  Then too, we&#8217;ve had things stolen out of our pickup,while in town, and our neigbors have been burgalarized several times.  We had a Columbian on our place looking for a neighbor who was one of their dealers down in Hollywood, so we realize that crime is everywhere, Costa Rica doesn&#8217;t have a monopoly on it, in fact, you are  probably more crime free than we are, more crime free than most states, counties and cities here in the U.S.</p>
<p>OK, back to bugs, we expect them and they&#8217;re the least of what concerns us.  Electricity, water and navigable roads are what I wonder about.  We&#8217;ve had our prolems with the last three right here, and that can become a big problem.</p>
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		<title>By: Costa-Rica &#187; Costa Rica Vacations changed our lives. Final stage.</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-13208</link>
		<dc:creator>Costa-Rica &#187; Costa Rica Vacations changed our lives. Final stage.</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2008 07:16:33 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-13208</guid>
		<description>[...] The Bug Man ComethBichos! Things with many legs! If you live here in the tropics, they are as much a part of your life as the sun, the beach, the mountains, and the bad roads! Certainly one of the most visited web pages in The REAL Costa Rica &#8230; [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] The Bug Man ComethBichos! Things with many legs! If you live here in the tropics, they are as much a part of your life as the sun, the beach, the mountains, and the bad roads! Certainly one of the most visited web pages in The REAL Costa Rica &#8230; [...]</p>
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		<title>By: Sandi Hummer</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-13207</link>
		<dc:creator>Sandi Hummer</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 09 Jul 2008 01:59:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-13207</guid>
		<description>Believe me, it&#039;s not a commercial.  I thought that it looked like one as well when I sent it, and wondered if it would make it.  I do use it a lot and recommend it quite a bit.  I can&#039;t sing it&#039;s praises enough as it has saved us a lot of grief. 

  When I went down south, to go to Saint Johns in Santa Monica to have my foot operated on by a docter I knew from UCLA Med Center, my friends from Manhattan Beach, old highschool friends, were living in Century City, so they came and picked me up and I stayed with them until the final release from my doctor as he kept me another three weeks. 

 I was being attacked by fleas at their place, the area was thick with them, so I had them get boxes of the regular and put it out in their patio down in between the openings between the bricks and Mike mixed up a slurry and put it on their dogs as they were miserable with them.  I then put it all around their house and lightly dusted between the sheets and the mattress with it.  It seemed to work pretty fast on them and ended the troubles.  Mike did get worried about it being toxic for their dogs and quit using it, but I&#039;ll tell you what, it works.  In fact it is usually a liquid borax that exterminators spray, or so I&#039;ve been told.  It is just cheaper my way.  I know derivative solutions of it are used for eye problems too, or is it? Or am I just associating it with it, as it sounds similar? Boric Acid?

I&#039;ve been wondering, if when we move down there if we should buy a big commercial drum of it if it&#039;s even possible, just to take with us as I don&#039;t want bugs everywhere I look, and I don&#039;t like to use too many poisons. I know there&#039;s Teflon tape to put on things that bugs slip off of and can&#039;t crawl on. Can you get it down there as well?  I imagine you can.  Can you get Borax down there as well?  I&#039;m not talking about the kind you wash your hands with like mechanics use, but the laundry kind. 

The thing is, you aren&#039;t hurting yourself with chemicals.  Often times it is what an exterminator is using anyway, just in a different form, so why pay big bucks when a couple of dollars might do it?  It lasts a lifetime, that is if it isn&#039;t where it will get rained or washed away.  So, in the long run it&#039;s cheaper, besides it being more effective, as once there, it stays. 

 Rich lived in an area where they sprayed for everything, fertalizers, bugs, weed killers, etc., even arial spraying.  This was in the San Joaquin valley and he feels a bit ill every time he&#039;s around sprays for bugs and crops.  

By the way, for gophers I use old crummy smelling onions, and they work well too. Ha. Shove them down their tunnels and holes.  I cut firmer ones in half so they don&#039;t sprout, and stick several of them them down their holes and cover them up.  Also, put them along your flowerbeds abour a foot deep.  I got desperate fighting gophers as well, and thought this up as I was trying my best to save my garden, as none of the commercial products were working.  I thought nothing can stand that smell, the smell of mushy stinky onions, I felt half sick trying to get it done, so bet gophers can&#039;t bear it either. They couldn&#039;t, they moved on.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Believe me, it&#8217;s not a commercial.  I thought that it looked like one as well when I sent it, and wondered if it would make it.  I do use it a lot and recommend it quite a bit.  I can&#8217;t sing it&#8217;s praises enough as it has saved us a lot of grief. </p>
<p>  When I went down south, to go to Saint Johns in Santa Monica to have my foot operated on by a docter I knew from UCLA Med Center, my friends from Manhattan Beach, old highschool friends, were living in Century City, so they came and picked me up and I stayed with them until the final release from my doctor as he kept me another three weeks. </p>
<p> I was being attacked by fleas at their place, the area was thick with them, so I had them get boxes of the regular and put it out in their patio down in between the openings between the bricks and Mike mixed up a slurry and put it on their dogs as they were miserable with them.  I then put it all around their house and lightly dusted between the sheets and the mattress with it.  It seemed to work pretty fast on them and ended the troubles.  Mike did get worried about it being toxic for their dogs and quit using it, but I&#8217;ll tell you what, it works.  In fact it is usually a liquid borax that exterminators spray, or so I&#8217;ve been told.  It is just cheaper my way.  I know derivative solutions of it are used for eye problems too, or is it? Or am I just associating it with it, as it sounds similar? Boric Acid?</p>
<p>I&#8217;ve been wondering, if when we move down there if we should buy a big commercial drum of it if it&#8217;s even possible, just to take with us as I don&#8217;t want bugs everywhere I look, and I don&#8217;t like to use too many poisons. I know there&#8217;s Teflon tape to put on things that bugs slip off of and can&#8217;t crawl on. Can you get it down there as well?  I imagine you can.  Can you get Borax down there as well?  I&#8217;m not talking about the kind you wash your hands with like mechanics use, but the laundry kind. </p>
<p>The thing is, you aren&#8217;t hurting yourself with chemicals.  Often times it is what an exterminator is using anyway, just in a different form, so why pay big bucks when a couple of dollars might do it?  It lasts a lifetime, that is if it isn&#8217;t where it will get rained or washed away.  So, in the long run it&#8217;s cheaper, besides it being more effective, as once there, it stays. </p>
<p> Rich lived in an area where they sprayed for everything, fertalizers, bugs, weed killers, etc., even arial spraying.  This was in the San Joaquin valley and he feels a bit ill every time he&#8217;s around sprays for bugs and crops.  </p>
<p>By the way, for gophers I use old crummy smelling onions, and they work well too. Ha. Shove them down their tunnels and holes.  I cut firmer ones in half so they don&#8217;t sprout, and stick several of them them down their holes and cover them up.  Also, put them along your flowerbeds abour a foot deep.  I got desperate fighting gophers as well, and thought this up as I was trying my best to save my garden, as none of the commercial products were working.  I thought nothing can stand that smell, the smell of mushy stinky onions, I felt half sick trying to get it done, so bet gophers can&#8217;t bear it either. They couldn&#8217;t, they moved on.</p>
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		<title>By: Tim</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-13204</link>
		<dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Jul 2008 19:21:55 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-13204</guid>
		<description>Sandi... Your comment sounds like a commercial :)

But as it made sense, I let it go though. A natural solution might suit a lot of environmentally conscious folks. Me? If we had cockroaches, I&#039;d use heavy weapons!</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Sandi&#8230; Your comment sounds like a commercial <img src='http://blog.therealcostarica.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>But as it made sense, I let it go though. A natural solution might suit a lot of environmentally conscious folks. Me? If we had cockroaches, I&#8217;d use heavy weapons!</p>
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		<title>By: Sandi Hummer</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-13203</link>
		<dc:creator>Sandi Hummer</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Jul 2008 18:35:54 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-13203</guid>
		<description>About bugs, I have to tell you. we moved into a beach cottage in Hermosa Beach, California back several years ago, and had no idea as to the severity of the cockroach infestation. No idea at all. We soon found out about them, as you couldn’t open a cupboard door or step out of bed at night without encountering whole families of them, they were all sizes of them and in huge numbers. Really terrible, I can&#039;t begin to tell you. 

Our next door neighbors in their brand new home were infested with them as well, and I mean terribly, so they went to the library and found out that Borox powder works, the kind used in laundry. It does so by drying up the protective coating on their shells. They have microscopic hairs on their legs and they pick up traces of the powder on them, boogie on back to their nests where they dry up and die. 

We used the Borateem, a finer powder and easier to disolve, as well as regular plain Borax. Neither kind are immediate, but it is long lasting, think  forever. I would think you could disolve the Borateem and spray it into holes and have it get in areas you can’t reach with dry powder. The regular Borax powder is hard to disolve. 

We went out and bought box after box of both kinds and poured it all around inside our cupboards, especially around the edges, around our baseboards, under our sinks, under our fridg, our stove, our washing machine, I mean we put it everywhere, especially under our beds. The thought of them crawling into our bed and our babies bed was terrible. 

We then put box after box under our house, doing this until it looked as though it had snowed under there. A bit of overkill I believe, but we really were desperate to rid our selves of them. There were no more cockroaches in the year we lived there. You can also put it up in your attic’s, in your closets, etc. 

I wash everything in it, as I like how it helps clean and how nicely clothing, blankets, sheets and towels come out when using it, always making sure I use it in the final rinse. It keeps everything smelling fresh and it helps items to last longer, and a bonus is that stains aren&#039;t as likely to set when Borax is already washed into them. I rinse first and last rinses in cold, sometimes using warm in the last rinse.

I don’t put it on the carpeting where we walk, as it would be hard on it, but I do put it on around the baseboards up next to them and about a foot out, and brush it in so it&#039;s not visible. It helps kill fleas as well. 

Borax is a one time and cheaper rememedy for most bugs. Not the ones which fly most of the time, but all others, although I believe it does damage their eggs and kills larvae. 

I put Borax in the final rinse of my woolens as well, thinking it might help keep moth damage down, as well as any other bugs which might, and often times do, eat clothing. Borax is used in baby clothing and diapers in final rinses so it is safe.

Sandi</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>About bugs, I have to tell you. we moved into a beach cottage in Hermosa Beach, California back several years ago, and had no idea as to the severity of the cockroach infestation. No idea at all. We soon found out about them, as you couldn’t open a cupboard door or step out of bed at night without encountering whole families of them, they were all sizes of them and in huge numbers. Really terrible, I can&#8217;t begin to tell you. </p>
<p>Our next door neighbors in their brand new home were infested with them as well, and I mean terribly, so they went to the library and found out that Borox powder works, the kind used in laundry. It does so by drying up the protective coating on their shells. They have microscopic hairs on their legs and they pick up traces of the powder on them, boogie on back to their nests where they dry up and die. </p>
<p>We used the Borateem, a finer powder and easier to disolve, as well as regular plain Borax. Neither kind are immediate, but it is long lasting, think  forever. I would think you could disolve the Borateem and spray it into holes and have it get in areas you can’t reach with dry powder. The regular Borax powder is hard to disolve. </p>
<p>We went out and bought box after box of both kinds and poured it all around inside our cupboards, especially around the edges, around our baseboards, under our sinks, under our fridg, our stove, our washing machine, I mean we put it everywhere, especially under our beds. The thought of them crawling into our bed and our babies bed was terrible. </p>
<p>We then put box after box under our house, doing this until it looked as though it had snowed under there. A bit of overkill I believe, but we really were desperate to rid our selves of them. There were no more cockroaches in the year we lived there. You can also put it up in your attic’s, in your closets, etc. </p>
<p>I wash everything in it, as I like how it helps clean and how nicely clothing, blankets, sheets and towels come out when using it, always making sure I use it in the final rinse. It keeps everything smelling fresh and it helps items to last longer, and a bonus is that stains aren&#8217;t as likely to set when Borax is already washed into them. I rinse first and last rinses in cold, sometimes using warm in the last rinse.</p>
<p>I don’t put it on the carpeting where we walk, as it would be hard on it, but I do put it on around the baseboards up next to them and about a foot out, and brush it in so it&#8217;s not visible. It helps kill fleas as well. </p>
<p>Borax is a one time and cheaper rememedy for most bugs. Not the ones which fly most of the time, but all others, although I believe it does damage their eggs and kills larvae. </p>
<p>I put Borax in the final rinse of my woolens as well, thinking it might help keep moth damage down, as well as any other bugs which might, and often times do, eat clothing. Borax is used in baby clothing and diapers in final rinses so it is safe.</p>
<p>Sandi</p>
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	<item>
		<title>By: Tim</title>
		<link>http://blog.therealcostarica.com/2008/07/07/the-bug-man-cometh/comment-page-1/#comment-13202</link>
		<dc:creator>Tim</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 08 Jul 2008 15:51:25 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://blog.therealcostarica.com/?p=311#comment-13202</guid>
		<description>Hi Julie

You wish is (almost) my command. 

You may see one here (click):

http://www.flickr.com/photos/ticogrande/150366178/in/set-72057594140919005/

I do not make any representation that my wife&#039;s opinion on the eating habit of this monster are accurate. :)

If you see one, they ARE hard to confuse with the &quot;others&quot;.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Hi Julie</p>
<p>You wish is (almost) my command. </p>
<p>You may see one here (click):</p>
<p><a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/ticogrande/150366178/in/set-72057594140919005/" rel="nofollow">http://www.flickr.com/photos/ticogrande/150366178/in/set-72057594140919005/</a></p>
<p>I do not make any representation that my wife&#8217;s opinion on the eating habit of this monster are accurate. <img src='http://blog.therealcostarica.com/wp-includes/images/smilies/icon_smile.gif' alt=':)' class='wp-smiley' /> </p>
<p>If you see one, they ARE hard to confuse with the &#8220;others&#8221;.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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