Product Label
4 5
ANT CONTROL
PEST LOCATION RATE
Nuisance Ants Outdoors
Carpenter Ants Outdoors
REMARKS
Locate and treat ant nests where possible. Apply where ants have been seen or would 
be expected to look for food. Apply to the perimeter using the applications described 
in the “Pest Control on Outside Surfaces and Around Buildings” instructions. Higher 
dilutions and/or volumes may be required when treating concrete surfaces.
•  Non-porous surfaces
0.5 – 1.0 . oz in one gallon of water.
Apply one gallon per 1,000 square feet.
REMARKS
Low volume application.
The following procedures must be followed to help achieve maximum control 
of the pest: Treat non-porous surfaces only in areas protected from rainfall 
and spray from sprinklers with low volume applications using 0.5 to 1.0 . 
oz of product per gallon of water and applying this dilution at the rate of one 
gallon per 1,000 square feet.
•  Porous surfaces and vegetation
0.5 – 1.0 . oz per
1,000 square feet
REMARKS
High volume application. Refer to Ornamental and Perimeter Application 
Dilution Chart.
•  Maximum residual control
0.5 – 1.0 . oz per gallon of water.
Apply up to 10 gallons 
per 1,000 square feet.
•  Tree trunks 0.5 – 1.0 . oz in one gallon of water
REMARKS
Apply this dilution to tree trunks which have carpenter ant trails, or where 
carpenter ants are looking for food. Be sure to completely wet the bark from 
the ground to as high as possible on the trunk.
Carpenter Ants in wood 1.0 . oz in one gallon of water
REMARKS
For control of carpenter ants in trees, utility poles, fencing or deck materials, drill to nd 
the infested cavity. Inject or foam the recommended rate into the cavity. Use sufcient 
volume and a tool with a splash back guard.
Carpenter Ants in soil 0.5 – 1.0  oz in one gallon of water
REMARKS
For control of carpenter ants tunneling in soil, apply as a drench. The dilution or foam 
can also be injected every 8 to 12 inches. It is important to create a vertical barrier 
especially at the edges of walls, driveways, or other surfaces beneath which the ants 
may be tunneling.
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