Woodstream M500 Victor Indoor Fly Trap
- Indoor, nontoxic fly trap
- Trap features fly-enticing 3-D design and bright colors
- With natural fly attractants, specialized glue lasts up to 8 weeks
- Flytrap efficiency is 60 percent greater than standard flytraps
- Flytrap may hang or stand alone; Woodstream offers full refund for deficient items
Product Description
- Poison Free - Easy To Use Amazon.com Review
Windows and doors open with increased frequency as the temperatures rise, allowing flies and other pests greater access to bring outside germs into kitchens, bathrooms, and other living spaces. To combat these aggravating insects, Woodstream offers this indoor flytrap. Efficient and nontoxic, this flytrap performs up to 60 percent better than standard flytraps. With Woodstream's Sylvalure system, this indoor flytrap entices flies with its 3-D design, bright colors, and a special glue containing natural fly attractants. The glue lasts up to eight weeks and easily washes off human hands. The indoor flytrap can either be hung or stand alone in a fly-infested room. Traps perform best in clean environments, as dust coats and impairs the glue. This indoor flytrap is designed to provide pest control for an average-sized room. Woodstream offers a refund for damaged or impaired items. --Jessica Reuling
|
Click on Product Listings for Details!
Woodstream M500 Victor Indoor Fly Trap
- Lawn & Patio: 0 pages
- Publisher: Woodstream
- Label: Woodstream
- Studio: Woodstream
- Average Customer Review:
based on 8 reviews
- Sales Rank in Garden: #28628
Click on Product Listings for Details!
Avg. Customer Review:
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Not yet... 2008-08-21
Comment: Well, I purchased 3 as they were inexpensive and I figured for the shipping, I might as well. I have two up in to different areas of my small apartment and after 24 hours, nothing. I've managed to kill some flies but that was only by me swatting at them.
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: great product 2007-09-18
Comment: This sly trap is attractive to look at, works well, and has no odor. I recommend it!
1 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: still waiting to catch a fly 2007-08-12
Comment: With hundreds of common house flies all about for 24 hours and not a single one caught I resorted to a fly swatter and killed 50 or so in 1-2 hours with my old fly swatter. This fly trap appears useless.
0 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: This does not work... 2007-08-10
Comment: After a summer grill party where the door was kept open all day/ food was out on the countertops, we developed a horrible fly infestation in our home. My husband bought this trap and it did not work, not one fly was caught. I ended up putting a tiny smear of honey on one side and that actually worked, the next day I counted over 30 flies on the thing. But by itself, it does nothing to 'attract' flies.
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
Customer Rating: 
Summary: Believe it or not, it actually works 2007-06-16
Comment: It was the "poison-free" part that attracted me; I don't like spraying bug spray all over my house. So I bought one of these. But I have to tell you, I was pretty skeptical. "Trap features fly-enticing 3-D design"? You've gotta be kidding. These goofy little 3-D boxes are supposed to attract flies? (Plus, my problem is fruit flies, not houseflies.)
Well, I caught nine fruit flies with it, roughly one per day. And where do you suppose they landed and got stuck? Yep, right on those silly pink "3-D" boxes, as if they thought they were flying through a tunnel or something. Don't ask me. They must be some pretty dumb fruit flies.
Note, however, that if you have that many fruit flies, then you probably have them breeding somewhere, and you just haven't found where yet. This kind of trap helps you pare them down, but if you have so many that the minute you squash one, you see another, you need to find that they're feeding off of and take care of it first. I discovered dozens of them in (yuck) a diaper pail, whose contents should've been thrown out long before. I didn't think fruit flies ate that stuff (well, I guess some of it was fruit once), but now I know. This trap is good for catching them _after_ you've rooted out the infestation, but it definitely won't stop such an infestation by itself.
|