🛡️ Keep your kitchen safe and moth-free with style!
Catchmaster Pantry Pest & Moth Traps offer a safe, non-toxic solution to eliminate moth infestations in your kitchen and storage areas. With a powerful pheromone attractant and ultra-sticky glue, these traps effectively target common pantry moths while ensuring the safety of your food and pets. Easy to use and made in the USA, they provide peace of mind for every household.
E**P
Works better than I could have expected
Within the first 30min to an hour each of the two traps I set out had caught 8 and 10 clothes or pantry moths from the bird seed nesting areas respectively. I’d never even seen that many moths in the house at one time before while looking for them and spraying with natural oil products. The traps are much more effective than I could have hoped for!Setting them up is easy when you crease the folds before removing the film backing.
C**)
Catchmaster Pantry Moth Traps that REALLY Work!
This is my second time using Catchmaster's Pantry Moth Traps. I had an issue several years ago with those little buggers and did some research that led me to Amazon to buy them. They worked very well and eliminated the moths completely for me, so naturally, I came back for the same when the issue arose again.This time, pantry moths came home in a bag of chicken feed. I did not realize what an issue I had on my hands until a whole bunch flew out and I saw the telltale webs that the leave behind all in the bottom of the bag. Of course, in the 2 days it took to receive my new traps in the mail, I noted that they had made their way in to the house from the back porch. As we bake a lot from scratch, I have a BUNCH of flours on hand that would be at risk from these little devils! Thankfully, this is a 6 pack and are plenty to place in all the places where I have at-risk food. I have 2 on the back porch, 2 with my flours, one with my cereals and one in the spice cabinet... yes, they will get into your spice bottle, too.They are very sticky, so the moths get stuck quickly and die. They come with a small bait that you place in the traps that attract the male moths who are looking to mate and catch them... sorry fellas! Killing off all the males eliminates the moths by breaking the life cycle. You do also need to clean out any webs in your cabinets that you find and throw out any food stuffs they have found, but I've found this to be a very effective tool in stopping them dead in their tracks.I want you to look at the picture I have shared here. It had been on my back porch less than 10 minutes! I brought it back in to show my husband how many we had already caught. Obviously we had quite the pantry moth parade on ours hands! I am so glad that these are a safe and effective way to eliminate these pesky little moths.
A**A
Beasts are gone
Worked great, these evil flying creatures are gone.And for some reason we did not have anything like this in local stores in the area.I just wish that this kit cost less.
H**T
Very good product, very good price
I had long used the Safer brand, with very good results,and decided to try these because they're less expensive. As best I can tell, they perform almost as well. On three occasions, I've set a new Safer next to a new Catchmaster, and both draw lots of moths. Just counted two pairs -- Safer: 21, Catchmaster: 14 // Safer: about 30, Catchmaster: about 40. Can't say definitively whether one consistently outperforms the other.Two small caveats:1. The Catchmaster glue smells a bit, and I wonder whether that initially puts off the moths -- with Safer (which don't smell), I've sometimes had moths fluttering by the trap moments after inserting the lure. (Never had an immediate flurry of moths with a Catchmaster.)2. The Catchmaster shape (a steep isoceles triangle) seems less effective -- the three angles are very sharp, which reduces the amount of space permeated by the lure. The Safer trap has a more open interior, which seems to facilitate spread of scent, movement by moths, and capture.I will continue to use both brands. (I don't recommend the Black Flag.)NOTE: If you have an infestation, you will need to use traps for at least three life cycles. Even if you see no more moths after that 1st trap fills up, don't think you're done, because you're not. They lay eggs everywhere, and then the larvae crawl into the most extraordinarily tight places so they can develop without being disturbed (I found one when I opened a new, factory-sealed jar of capers -- the larva had eased itself under the lip of the cap and into one of the threads at the top of the jar). You *can* get rid of these pests, but it takes dedication -- and if you have pet food in your home (and/or corn- or wheat-based cat litter), you'll want to have a trap nearby at all times.
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