Ant bites: Help!

Texas Star

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The week of heavy rain (I guess) flushed out some ants.

I'll try poison in a spray can and ant motels if the grocer has some. Been stomping a bunch. A few have gotten up on kitchen counters.

I got three bites on my right hand and they haven't shown signs of healing since yesterday. They're pink at the base with light heads. They don't hurt, but look bad. Maybe 2mm across.

Solutions? I dabbed on alcohol, but it hasn't helped. Will try Neosporin or similar salve.


No pain, but I want these to heal. And I may get others by the time this ends.

I'm going to ask the pharmacist if he has any ideas later today. Have to pick up a prescription for something else, anyway. But this board can answer about any question, so I'm asking. I don't know the ant species, but they're little ones. It hurt sharply for a few seconds as each bite arrived. I suspect they deposited some poison in the wounds.
 
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If these are fire ants, which mostly they are, find the nest mound out in your yard. Get some dry ice(frozen CO2), chip off a decent sized chunk, and stick it into the mound. Don't let them get on you, as it will hurt and could put you into anaphylatic shock, if you are allergic to their sting. The CO2 will evaporate, and, the vapor being heavier than air, will permeate the mound killing all inside all the way to the bottom. This is cheaper and much more effective than any of the fire ant remedies I have tried previously.

Don't scratch the little pimple that arises, as it may become infected and may leave a scar. Get some hydrocortisone cream at the drugstore and apply it to reduce the itching. Don't mess with these beasts, as the stings can kill you if you get too many.
 
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There is a commercial product called After Bite that may be of some use.

I took care of fire ant hills by stirring them up and then blasting them with a yard flamethrower. It was fun, but does result in some damage to the yard.

The silver cans of Raid Maxx seemed to have good ant killing properties.
 
What Shaggist said about don't scratch...If it's only one or three bites, or if several are concentrated in one place, cover with some tape..any kind will do...Keeps you from scratching, and somehow the tape prevents the itching sensation.

WuzzFuzz
 
My experience with fire ant bites is they can take as long as 2 weeks to completely heal. They are not your average insect bite. And they are bites, not stings. As far as getting rid of the fire ant mounds, there are products that will kill an individual mound. Orthene works well on a mound. However, getting rid of them completely is an entirely different story. You kill one mound, others will simply show up somewhere else. Fire ant colonies are huge, with the bulk of them underground. Texas A&M is trying to find a way to achieve some level of control over fire ants. Complete (temporary) eradication requires use of baits (Amdro, e.g.) by you and your neighbors over a large area and an extended period of time. This is a difficult problem and complete eradication is probably never going to happen.
 
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Grandma used to dab them with ammonia. It seemed to work but it was done right after the bite. I don't know if it would do you any good at this point.

I hate those little bleepers.
 
From your description of the bites, you have fire ants. Every time we have a soaking rain we have many fire ants mounds around the house and in the pastures. If you have lots of ant mounds, it’s pointless to treat one mound at a time. I use fire ant bait in a broadcast spreader. The solution is to kill as many as possible over as large an area as possible, including the queen ant in the mound.
 
JingleBob, they are a pain in the rear... or elsewhere. Amdro is effective as a broadcast bait but it's not cheap, and then there is the problem of the surviving ants for a few days after the queen dies.
For isolated colonies, down here they can be basketball sized and cave at the slightest touch, I use Bifen I/T which is the best all around insecticide I've ever used. I'll wet the ground around the base with a pump sprayer then thoroughly wet, not soak, the mound.
Colony is dead within a couple of hours, never to return.
 
Does one develop an immunity to fire ants? The first few times I got bit seemed the worst Later, when I would occasionally get bit wiping out hills, it got to be that I would hardly notice.

A tea kettle of boiling water will also put a dent in their population for those who not have a flame thrower handy.
 
If these are fire ants, which mostly they are, find the nest mound out in your yard. Get some dry ice(frozen CO2), chip off a decent sized chunk, and stick it into the mound. Don't let them get on you, as it will hurt and could put you into anaphylatic shock, if you are allergic to their sting. The CO2 will evaporate, and, the vapor being heavier than air, will permeate the mound killing all inside all the way to the bottom. This is cheaper and much more effective than any of the fire ant remedies I have tried previously.

Don't scratch the little pimple that arises, as it may become infected and may leave a scar. Get some hydrocortisone cream at the drugstore and apply it to reduce the itching. Don't mess with these beasts, as the stings can kill you if you get too many.

See highlighted portion of quote: this is what's bothering me. I have asthma and am probably especially in danger from insect and arthropod bites.

And I think these are fire ants.

Thanks for the help.
 
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Preperation H will stop the itch, and give those bites a chance to heal. It's a local anesthetic. I've used Andro, but I've heard of the dry ice method, just be darn careful around the nest (s). Good luck, TS.
 
Does one develop an immunity to fire ants? The first few times I got bit seemed the worst Later, when I would occasionally get bit wiping out hills, it got to be that I would hardly notice.

A tea kettle of boiling water will also put a dent in their population for those who not have a flame thrower handy.



I've actually sloshed a bit of hot water on a few that got on my stove top. I was boiling water for tea and the targets were there, so...

I may dab the wounds with a tea bag after it cools off. The tannins may help healing.
 
Does one develop an immunity to fire ants? The first few times I got bit seemed the worst Later, when I would occasionally get bit wiping out hills, it got to be that I would hardly notice.

I don't know about fire ants but for me it worked the opposite way with members of the bee/wasp families. When I was a kid my Dad raised bees and I was stung numerous times, now I am deathly allergic.
 
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