AAA Brothers Exterminators,
Inc.
1) Bugs Bite Dust In Hidden Breeding Hollows. Next we go
under your kitchen and bathroom cabinets. Beneath each of
them we find four-inch hollow voids. Bugs love ‘em. So, if
there no openings, we drill a few discreet holes and treat.
More bugs bite the dust.
2) Bugs Get Birth Control In Cracks & Crevices. Every
crack and crevice found in the walls, floors and ceilings of
your home are open doors to bugs. But the cracks can be
turned to our advantage. Using a specially designed product
that actually stops bugs from breeding. Sure, they keep
doing “it.” But they have no idea that their fast and loose
habits are taking the whole colony down a one-way
street.
3) One Squirt Bars Doors & Windows To Bugs. Even the
smallest of cracks allows some bugs to enter your home.
Windows and doors are not an exception, even when insulated.
So we treat them too.
4) Moisture-Proof Dust Zaps Bugs Around Unseen Drinking
Fountains. Around every water outlet in your home you’ll
find a small round chrome cover. It makes things look
attractive and finished. Except, it also hides a dark, damp
hole that bugs love to crawl into.
Why? The hole contains moisture, dripped in from a leaky
faucet or shower head. Bugs can go for 10 days without food.
But they need moisture every day. That’s why we shoot in a
special, moisture-proof dust. So when the bugs come back for
a drink, they pick up the dust on their legs and bodies and
take it back to the nest. A fatal mistake. Once they start
grooming each other, the dust ends up killing them.
5) Dust Zaps Bugs Hiding In Dry Holes. So where do the
bugs go after taking a drink? Back to the holes that are
warm and dry. Holes found behind all your electrical outlets
and switch plates. One puff of bug dust and the hole becomes
a death trap.
6) Bugs Cleaned Out From Under
Appliances Hot Spots. Speaking of moisture, for a great many
bugs, under appliances can be a favorite retreat. Again,
they are dark and musty. With one treatment, we turn them
from sleazy watering holes into merciless killing zones. (To
bugs, that is, not humans or pets)
7) Bugs Wipe Themselves To Death. Next, we treat under
bottoms of siding with a special “microencapsulated” product
(it dries on any surface). We think of it as a tiny cold
capsule, except it kills bugs instead of bacteria. Pests
work their way in from the outside. And they don’t bother to
knock before coming in. Which means you have to knock them
out before they even try.
The capsules slowly release a small amount of insecticide
each day. When a bug crawls across a treated surface, it
picks up the capsules and, again, ends up wiping itself-to
death.
8) “No Bug’s Land” Created From Four Foot Band Of Slow
Death. Since we are on the outside, we also treat underneath
and around your garbage cans, woodpiles, porches, and decks.
To finish off, we apply a 4-foot barrier around your whole
entire house. So, every time it rains or your sprinkler
turns on, the water slowly releases the insecticide. Any bug
that comes in contact with it faces fast termination.
9) Ants & Roaches Work Themselves To Death. Bugs hide
from the light. That means they’re hiding more than crawling
out in the open. For example, down in the mulch around your
bushes and shrubs, you’ll find them. Like roaches and ants.
But how do you zap them?
You don’t. You get them to do their own work of death.
When they come in contact with the baits, they naturally
take some of it back to their hiding places. As a result,
they not only zap themselves, but also all other bugs that
help groom them.
10) Silverfish And Other Bugs Die Digesting Bad Books.
Storage and utility rooms are famous for storing bugs,
especially Silverfish. They like to eat the glue and
cellulose found in books, boxes, and other paper products.
One treatment and their food source suddenly turns to a bad
dream they never wake up from.
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