Many gardeners face the question of how to get rid of ants in their gardens permanently using folk remedies. While it's commonly believed that these bugs' presence in the garden is beneficial, it also has negative consequences, affecting the crops growing there. After all, if ants were only beneficial, gardeners wouldn't be racking their brains over how to get rid of them permanently using folk remedies.
Ants in the garden: pros and cons
Let's consider two opposing aspects of ant activity in garden beds. Let's begin with the benefits these insects provide as they develop their activities in the garden.
Ants in the garden: advantages
- By digging underground passages, ants loosen the soil, which helps enrich plant roots with oxygen.
- Ants can pollinate plants and flowers.
- In order to obtain protein for themselves, ants often become enemies of many garden pests, larvae and caterpillars, which are the source of this protein.
Despite such a list of advantages, it's still better to do without the help of industrious ants. Because while they sow good, they also sow evil.
Ants in the garden: disadvantages
- In an attempt to get sweet nectar for themselves, ants damage plant flowers.
- They love to feast on ripe berries, which results in them spoiling and they can no longer be included in your harvest.
- Young seedlings and even plant seeds can become a treat for insects, which may ultimately fail to germinate.
- While constructing underground passages, ants can touch the roots of the plant and damage them.
- If insects choose plant trunks as their nesting sites, over time they turn into dust, which leads to their death.
Such destruction from small pests becomes a significant enough reason to get rid of ants forever Folk remedies. The use of chemicals is not ruled out in this case, but folk remedies are safer for crops.
Folk remedies for ant control in the garden
Soap solution
Preparing a soapy solution and then treating plant crops with it will promote the formation of a thin soap film, preventing aphids—the ants' primary and favorite food source—from breathing through their skin. Without food, the ants will abandon the area in search of a more reliable source.
This mixture is very easy to prepare: dissolve 0.1 liter of liquid soap in ten liters of regular water. Apply the mixture to all sides of the plant, paying particular attention to the leaves, covering both the outer and inner surfaces (aphids like to hide on the undersides of leaves). The treatment should be carried out at sunset to allow the film to form overnight.
Strong odors as insect repellents
Ants dislike strong odors, so if you take care of this, they'll leave the area. You can treat your property with an onion or garlic infusion, prepared as follows: chop the onion or garlic and add enough water to submerge all the plant particles. Then, tightly seal the container with the infusion and let it sit for 7 to 10 days. After this time, the infusion is ready; dilute it with water in a 1:1 ratio. This solution can be used to spray plants and the property.
Whether or not to combat ants is a personal decision for every gardener. After all, if their presence in the garden isn't causing any damage, there's no need to burden yourself with unnecessary work. However, it's important to always remember that it's often impossible to visually determine whether ants are causing harm, and by the time external signs of damage appear, it's already too late.

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