A common sign for some homeowners is wings around areas that your home opens to the outdoors.
Insulating around windows and doors where termites exist.
But we rarely talk about how.
This could be a window door vent or small crack.
Swarming termites are attracted to light and are often found near windows doors vents and light fixtures.
Another sign to look for is difficulty with windows and doors sticking or bubbling paint.
Winged termites are often the first sign of a subterranean termite infestation.
Joists can be weakened and you can experience damage like sagging floors shifted window and door frames peeling paint and more.
Any wood that comes into contact with your home s exterior may create an opportunity for termites to infiltrate your home s interior.
Occasionally you may find signs of termite infestations in easier to reach places such as attics door frames wooden furniture door frames and window frames.
This means that a colony of termites might be calling your house home.
A friend reopened sealed pocket doors on the top floor of his 1900 triple decker in boston recently and from inside the walls along with the pocket doors came shredded paper.
When a colony has matured winged swarming termites can be seen around windows and doors.
Most dampwood and drywood termites live inside the woods they eat while subterranean termites mostly live in the ground and venture to and from the wood they consume back to their underground colony.
Termites feed on cellulose an essential component of wood.
Termites dead or alive.
The three common types of home invading termites dampwood drywood and subterranean are drawn to homes for different reasons.
Some ants such as fire ants solenopsis invicta and big headed ants pheidole megacephala will often bring dirt into homes in an attempt to nest in the walls of the structure.
Serious infestations that are left unchecked can result in even more dramatic damage.
Experiencing a termite swarm is the 1 sign that your property has a termite problem.
Winged termites are highly attracted to sources of light and are most active in springtime.
Termites can tunnel through the walls.
They nest in wood that is moist or has been previously damaged by water or termites.
Termites aren t limited to wooden delicacies inside your home either.
In the late 1800s primitive insulation could be comprised of a number of mundane materials such as newspaper wood shavings corncobs and even seaweed.
Decks patios porches tree stumps sheds and garages are also termite hotspots.
After mating these termites locate a new breeding site and create another colony spreading infestations throughout multiple locations.
Subterranean termites will search out food sources that exist above ground in addition to their more readily available food supplies.