The Cockroach Scurries at Night
Ever wake up thirsty in the middle of the night, walk to the kitchen for a glass of water, turn on the light, and see microscopic brown spots scattering for cover?
Unnerving, isn't it?
Most of us know what the German cockroach looks like; we see it in our homes more than other roaches. You first see this one in the kitchen most often. When roaches infest the home they're commonly the German variety. On opportunity an American roach makes its appearance, or the Oriental stops by, or the Pennsylvania Wood Roach flies through an open window.
Don't worry about that long, slender wood roach. He lives in the trees, and prefers life outdoors. When he does find himself inside it's probably by accident. American roaches live in the sewer in every city, and since those sewers are warm, moist, and dark, they don't often climb out where we'll see them. If you do see one of these nasty creatures it probably crawled out of a dry drain. When the traps in the drain principles are full of water the American doesn't get through. They don't swim.
Dry drains are rare in the home, manufacture American cockroach sightings rare. We see this roach in market buildings like groceries and hospitals where not all drains are used. Oriental cockroaches thrive in damp environments, and as a matter of fact do well in cold climates. We rarely see them because they often stay in crawlspace areas, and out-of-doors.
But that German roach? He's the one that we fight most for control of our homes. He's the roach that hides while the day, waiting for night and darkness, waiting until you drift off to sleep, waiting for his time to play.
All day long he's waiting for his time to go exploring in your cabinets, crawling into any food items you accidentally left open just the tiniest crack. All night long they invade your kitchen, leaving their deposits anywhere they travel. But you won't find these bugs only in the kitchen; Germans infest any area of the home where they find warmth, darkness, and food. Their next common habitat, after the kitchen, is the bathroom.
They live on the pipes under sinks, in the walls, under the floor, and nearby the motors of appliances (like the refrigerator, dishwasher, clothes washer, and dryer). while the daytime they commonly scurry nearby in accomplished cabinets, since accomplished cabinets offer dark spaces. These are nighttime creatures. They like it dark. That's why you rarely see them while the day. If you do see them in the daytime chances are there's a huge habitancy in your house, a habitancy that's been growing for a while, and elimination requires concentrated effort.
Their microscopic feces pellets identify that you have a roach problem. The pellets look much like mouse droppings. The telling unlikeness is that roach feces have rounded ends, while mouse droppings have pointed ends. Another way to spot a roach qoute is suddenly shining a flashlight under the kitchen sink. If your eyes are quick enough you'll see them running away from the light.
The Cockroach Scurries at Night
The Cockroach Scurries at Night
The Cockroach Scurries at Night
The Cockroach Scurries at Night The Cockroach Scurries at Night
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