Tiny Game Hunting :Environmentally Healthy Ways to Trap and Kill the Pests in Your House and Garden

4.27 ( 26 Ratings by Goodreads)
Tiny Game Hunting

Tiny Game Hunting :Environmentally Healthy Ways to Trap and Kill the Pests in Your House and Garden

4.27 (26 Ratings by Goodreads)
paperback
Published: 22 June, 2001
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Description

Every year Americans use a staggering five hundred million pounds of toxic pesticides in and around their homes, schools, parks, and roads - a growing health risk for people and the environment. But are these poisons really necessary? This book, appealing to the hunter in us all, shows how to triumph in combat with pests without losing the war to toxic chemicals. Tiny Game Hunting, written in a lively and entertaining style and illustrated with detailed drawings, gives more than two hundred tried-and-true ways to control or kill common household and garden pests without using toxic pesticides.
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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9780520221079
ISBN10 0520221079
Number Of Pages 278
Item Weight 408 g
Product Dimensions 152 x 229 x 15 mm
Publisher / Reseller University of California Press
Format paperback
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Media Reviews

"Tiny Game Hunting is the delightful name of a useful book [that tells] how to get ants to move by pouring a blended solution of lemon peel on their nest, how to repel gophers with Juicy Fruit gum, and how to confuse thrips with aluminum strips. There is some very good natural history on each pest - so you better understand what makes them tick - and it is told with a fine sense of humor. There are dozens of pests described and hundreds of clever cures in this book." - Los Angeles Times "This book advocates the rational use of alternative home remedies, rather than commercial long-lived biocidal death sprays....[The authors] present commonsense, forgotten, and little-known tactics for dealing with troublesome pests in and around the home." - Backyard Bugwatching"

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Author's Bio

Hilary Dole Klein is a writer living in Santa Barbara and the author of A Guide to Nonsexist Children's Books (1976) and Substituting Ingredients (third edition, 1994), among other books. Adrian M. Wenner is Professor Emeritus of Natural History at the University of California, Santa Barbara, and the author of books, articles, and a chapter in Comparative Psychology of Invertebrates: The Field and Laboratory Study of Insect Behavior (1997).

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