We returned from our glorious Greek idyll to a heatwave and an invasion of tiny black ants. The little buggers were climbing up and down our narrow cottage stairs, marching across our dining room floor and, horror of horrors, crawling all over the Pinot Grigio.
I know ants have their uses – helping to maintain a healthy topsoil and all that, and generally we live in harmonious co-existence. But that’s outside in the garden where they belong, not under our floorboards. They had to go.
Not in the house. Not on my watch!
Liam said.
He fought back with chemicals – sprays, powder and traps – a toxic assault of shock and awe. If he’d had napalm or mustard gas in his arsenal, he’d have used them too.

Then emerged the fatter, horny variety with wings, lusting after their mid-air shag-fest, triggered, no doubt, by the steamy weather. But instead of taking flight for their annual orgy, they staggered out of various cracks and crevices like drunks at closing time. We’d won the battle but have we won the war? Only time will tell. Odds are the colony has been living beneath our feet for ages. I’ve read that the queen can survive for 25 years. She might see me out.
Tomorrow belongs to the creatures that creep and crawl.
Ah yes, life in the jungle, battling the ants. We will never win. We’ve learned to live with many critters most would find appalling.
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When I lived in Malaysia as a child, ants were something we lived with too – even the nasty red ones. But in temperate England? No way! 😉
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When we first got here, the child of the housekeeper where we were staying asked to borrow sugar. When I opened the container it was full of tiny ants. He proceeded to make his lemonade while declaring “die ants!” As he turned on the blender. Kind of set the stage. 😛
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Blimey!
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