moontheloon
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 8,592
- Location
- NJ
I just spent the morning having breakfast with an old friend.
Chris is a practicing certified entomologist and and professor of insect ecology. He dedicates his life to the science of insects.
I was wearing a Borsalino hat and naturally he asked about it and we began discussing.
This brought me to the "mothing" issue so many have and I thought I would inquire considering his expertise.
what he told me was very interesting.
A few interesting points he shared with me
first of all there are 15,000 moth species and very few of them are cloth eating species.
I think he said there are 2 or 3 species that are cloth eaters.
Cedar does not repel moths.
it is the oil in the cedar that may sometimes ... not all the time slightly repel a moth but that oil is likely almost completely dissipated from any chips or balls that we would buy at the store and it completely dries out within a year of the tree being chopped down.
another note was that is it not moths that will nibble on our hats but their larvae which are small caterpillars that exist for roughly ten days.
unfortunately cedar or its oil will do nothing to repel this larvae.
The best way to prevent "mothing" ... which I guess should be called "larvaing" since it is not moths at all that eat our hats ... is to prevent the laying of eggs.
what he suggested was the best way to keep moth damage was to keep our hats in boxes with tightly closed lids and to keep those boxes in a room that is semi frequented by yourself or family.
Chris also suggested that during the spring and summer seasons we should brush our hats probably twice a month
to conclude ... there is nothing that is not a poisonous pesticide that will completely repel moths.
Cedar chips and balls etc. will not hurt but will not do nearly what most of us expect them to do as far as keeping moths from laying eggs near our hats.
I hope you found any of this even remotely interesting
it interested me for I was not aware of a lot of this information
he shared a lot more but I just cannot remember everything that took place in a 3 hour conversation.
I may ask him to write something up for me and post it here
Chris is a practicing certified entomologist and and professor of insect ecology. He dedicates his life to the science of insects.
I was wearing a Borsalino hat and naturally he asked about it and we began discussing.
This brought me to the "mothing" issue so many have and I thought I would inquire considering his expertise.
what he told me was very interesting.
A few interesting points he shared with me
first of all there are 15,000 moth species and very few of them are cloth eating species.
I think he said there are 2 or 3 species that are cloth eaters.
Cedar does not repel moths.
it is the oil in the cedar that may sometimes ... not all the time slightly repel a moth but that oil is likely almost completely dissipated from any chips or balls that we would buy at the store and it completely dries out within a year of the tree being chopped down.
another note was that is it not moths that will nibble on our hats but their larvae which are small caterpillars that exist for roughly ten days.
unfortunately cedar or its oil will do nothing to repel this larvae.
The best way to prevent "mothing" ... which I guess should be called "larvaing" since it is not moths at all that eat our hats ... is to prevent the laying of eggs.
what he suggested was the best way to keep moth damage was to keep our hats in boxes with tightly closed lids and to keep those boxes in a room that is semi frequented by yourself or family.
Chris also suggested that during the spring and summer seasons we should brush our hats probably twice a month
to conclude ... there is nothing that is not a poisonous pesticide that will completely repel moths.
Cedar chips and balls etc. will not hurt but will not do nearly what most of us expect them to do as far as keeping moths from laying eggs near our hats.
I hope you found any of this even remotely interesting
it interested me for I was not aware of a lot of this information
he shared a lot more but I just cannot remember everything that took place in a 3 hour conversation.
I may ask him to write something up for me and post it here
Last edited: