🌳 Keep your trees thriving with Tanglefoot's ultimate insect barrier!
The Tanglefoot 0461306 Insect Barrier Kit Combo is a powerful, ready-to-use solution designed to protect your trees from a variety of pests, including gypsy moths and caterpillars. Its long-lasting, weatherproof formula ensures effective defense against the elements, making it a must-have for eco-conscious gardeners.
A**A
Effective, very sticky.
Wonderful at doing its job: creating an impassable barrier for crawling insects.Personal Tip: It is extremely sticky and will not wash off. You can keep using your hands in outside activities (like garden/yardwork) and it will quickly wear off without you noticing. I recommend NOT using gloves as it will not come as easily off anything else as it will your skin. I use a dedicated palette knife blade for application as I found that's what works best for me. I 'clean' it by wiping on grass.A little goes a long, long, long way. If your target is in direct sun for most of the day, you will find you need more frequent applications. At the heat of summer, I was applying every two weeks. Outside of that window, 3-4 weeks was the norm. Sun will make it run off and you will start to see a few stray ants: time to re-apply.I've seen some reviews saying you do not need to apply the entire width of the included barrier roll (3"-4"); Yes, yes, you do. The bodies of insects will build up and they WILL train/bridge across it in self sacrifice to reach the fruit. Do not give them such little room to reach across as to negate all your set-up. Keep the layer thin but cover any gaps. Towards the end of the season, I simply touched up by applying a thin strip (1") above the initial barrier and let it drip down to meet the established barrier; this worked for me instead of removing paper and then re-applying another 4" barrier. Even if I had, would still have a lot left, but time saved. You will also need something to tie the paper barrier around your target so it stays in place. The paper is only there to give you the option to apply it to a removable media instead of directly to bark. I've done both. With frequent applications needed, I find fussing with paper to be tiresome and chose not to. It will not harm the tree. It does have an added benefit of instantly displacing any squirrel that jumps on at that point, tho. They hate it, but it is funny (if annoying) to see their paw prints all the way up the trunk.Highly recommend this all natural product.Read the instructions, as it's very important that no other access to the targets can be around for it to work (i.e., stakes for a tree; anchor lines, string, or other route of bypass to the canopy/fruit-bearing access).
A**C
Mixed bag of results here
I have multiple bee hives that are top bar hives (rectangle boxes that stand off the ground with 2x4 instead of the traditional cubes you might be used to) and I started to get some free loading ants setting up shop for the honey my bees were making. Being a responsible owner of bees I couldn't see their hard work going to these invaders so I searched around for how to stop this invasion. The ants were coming into the hive via the 2x4 supports and they were unapologetic and showed this by straight up building a hive adjacent to the bees. Apparently some people have used tanglefoot to stop them from coming up so figured I would do the same. Great idea on paper, horrible in real life. This stuff is a two part process. First you wrap the 2x4 with this bandage looking stuff then you smear this what I can best describe as asphalt filler on it and presto you're supposed to have a barrier. A couple problems come up, the bandage stuff isn't adhesive so wrapping it on vertical beams and having it stay is a Herculean task in itself. Let's say by some magic way you do wrap something well then comes the part of applying the tangle foot. You can wear gloves but you're gonna saturate your entire body with this stuff worse than a Chernobyl clean up worker gets covered in radiation. In the end the ants got dark on me and literally built a land bridge using their dead for other to walk across. It was really quite morbid so yeah mixed results.
M**J
It was difficult to work
This is difficult to work with but I do not know of anything else on the market. I watched a few youtube videos only to find how others were using this product. There are some insightful ideas out there. The paper barrier does not stretch or stick to itself. You cannot use this during the rains. Tied a string to hold the barrier in place since scotch tape will not work well. I packed paper towel under the paper barrier where I thought bugs might get through under the barrier. Finally gave up on the paper barrier and used saran wrap. I will not leave the saran wrap on the tree for more than a month. I might get away with painter's tape next year and it might hold up during light spring rains since it can handle paint.
M**V
Not a fan
The paper part was impossible to usefully attach to an older oak tree with very rough bark. Maybe it would be ok on a smoother bark.The sticky/oozy part was very messy. I used gloves which is an absolute must, but it ended up everywhere...on my scissors, the ground, the door knob. With the gloves, I couldn't feel it and when it was really thin, I didn't see it. A pain to clean up after. Worse, I carefully wrapped several layers of plastic wrap around a new tree I planted (small diameter) and even though I thought I had put the gooey stuff on quite thin, it still ended up dripping down onto the tree bark by the next day. Probably as bad for the tree as the gypsy moths would have been...hopefully not worse. Very messy to remove without hurting the tree even more.I would not purchase this again, but maybe someone else would have better luck. There are a lot of bugs stuck to it, just not gypsy moths.
J**B
Use Duct tape to keep the wrap on the tree
I thought the tree wrap would be stretchy and hang on the tree; I tried using the tanglefoot to glue the ends of the wrap together; that doesn’t work at all. Of course I got covered with the sticky stuff; I’m glad no one took a video of this disaster. So the second day I went out and all of the tree wraps had fallen off. This time I wrapped the trees and duct-taped the ends of the wrap together. The sticky stuff adheres to the duct tape and the wrap well. I watched videos of how to use this product and every video concentrates on how to put the sticky stuff on and not how to keep the wrap on the tree.
M**S
It is hard to get it to stay on the tree
It was easy to apply and we used duct tape to bring the crepe paper together. It was ok for about a month and then with the wind and rain it has all come off of all the trees. I will never buy it again. I wasted my money. I am trying to figure out how to get it to stay on the trees. So it is not going to give us the protection on our fruit trees that we need.
A**R
Waiting for spring
Looks and sounds like what is required. Can't wait to try it....
B**R
Wear gloves.
I am happy with the product. It is exactly as described. One caution though - Wear disposable gloves when taking the Tanglefoot container out of the plastic wrap. Mine leaked a bit and the container was covered in the Tanglefoot.
N**S
delivered on time
works good
J**T
Darn those moths anyway!
We are trying to get ahead of gypsy moths this year. Tried this product, as advertised and easy to use. Whether is helps is to be determined.
A**Y
No instructions
There were no instructions as how to use. It came with no tape
Trustpilot
5 days ago
3 weeks ago