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Kiko Denzer on Art



[Cob] Insects inside a cob house?

Clint Popetz clint at ucimc.org
Wed May 12 17:14:55 CDT 2004


On Wed, May 12, 2004 at 09:39:43PM +0000, Chaos Project wrote:
 
> I grew up in an old house (circa 1890), and in the summer we always
> have ants in our kitchen. They come in through cracks in the brick,
> spaces around the kitchen window, etc. We constantly try to caulk up
> the holes, but each year they find new ways in. The other issue is
> spiders, though thankfully there weren't too many of those.  I like
> bugs just fine outside, but I don't like them crawling into my food
> on my kitchen counter, or crawling into my bed while I'm sleeping...
> In a building built almost entirely of earth, are there more bugs
> than a conventional house? less? same? Would thick, solid walls keep
> them out, or make it easier for them to get in? What about cracks
> around window frames?  I apologize if these topics have been covered
> already, or if they're common knowledge in the Cob community, I'm a
> quick learner, but I'm just starting out! :)

In my experience of a wood frame house vs. cob house, observing the
movement of bugs, wood frame houses are a _lot_ more permeable to
insects than cob.  Bugs can't crawl through a foot and a half of what
is, in essence, natural concrete.  They will still come through the
ceiling, doors, windows, and floor just like a normal house (except in
the case of a poured adobe floor.)


Nothing seems to stop ants around here.  If there are crumbs, there
are ants.  I just live with them, and flick them off my plates before
serving food.  Spiders are fewer, but welcome in my house, even given
my huge fear of them, because they eat other bugs.

			-Clint