The first line of defense against stink bugs is to take the appropriate measures that are necessary in order to keep them from entering into your homes. Millions of homes across the country have played host to stink bugs that have somehow managed invade your house and made a home for themselves within the four walls of your domicile.
Unless you run a farm, where stink bugs pose a very real threat to your crops, you probably do not have a problem with stink bugs when they are outdoors. In fact, you probably don’t even see them or notice them outdoors. We can go through our entire lives, completely oblivious to the fact that stink bugs are all around us, until and unless they manifest themselves indoors.
And so the most obvious question might be “why”? Why do stink bugs seem to be so determined to make their way indoors? Why do they go through all the trouble to squeeze into our homes, the cracks in the windows, cracks in the siding, and cracks in the foundation, or through the chimney or exhaust vents? Obviously it can’t merely be some coincidence that a horde of stink bugs just happened to randomly end up inside your home. They must have deliberately made an effort to come inside. Surprisingly enough, that is true.
Stink bugs do try to come into your home on purpose. Why? There are a few obvious reasons:
- Stink bugs are instinctively drawn toward sources of light. At night time, if you leave your window blinds or your curtains open while the lights are on, guess who you will find clinging to your window screens? Yep. You guessed it. Stink bugs. So one way to prevent an onslaught of stink bugs would be to close your curtains and your blinds at night so that no indoor lighting escapes outdoors for stink bugs to take notice of and be drawn towards.
- Stink bugs seek out sources of warmth. During the summer months, stink bugs will merrily mind their own business, dwelling outdoors thanks to the temperate season. But as the weather begins to cool in autumn, you will find many a stink bug attempting to seek refuge in warm places indoors, in order to escape the cold. And so therefore, peoples’ homes becomes a prime target for stink bugs during the cold winter months. So what can you do in this situation? You need to make sure that there are no cracks in your window sills, no cracks in the foundation, and no cracks in the siding of your house, and that you use appropriate coverings over your exterior exhaust vents so that stink bugs will be deterred against trying to gain entry into your home through any of these crevices.
- Stink bugs have been reportedly known to track the scent of other stink bugs, particularly if they had previously been squashed or had been frightened and given off their trademark pungent odor. So it is important that you strike “squashing” off of your list of ways how to kill stink bugs. If you want to know how to kill a stink bug, there are plenty of other ways to do so that don’t involve actually squashing them.