We've been using mosquito traps in my neighborhood for a couple of years now so a few notes:
1. Straw works the absolute best for stagnant water that's not stinky from feet away. Green grass will smell to high heaven. Dried leaves are better but can still get pungent. Dried grass or straw is pretty much only smelly if you stir it up. It still ferments and grows attractive bacteria though.
2. You only need a quarter (1/4) of a dunk per bucket. The dose is calculated by surface area and a quarter of one will work just fine for five gallon buckets and less. That means one dunk lasts four months per bucket but it does need to be renewed every month.
3. If you aren't monitoring your buckets closely, don't do the dump method. Once it warms up, you can get from eggs to adults in as short as four days. Not an issue with dunks.
4. Either cover with a wide mesh screen or add a stick to your bucket so small animals that fall in can get out, especially if you're using a five gallon bucket or something else tall. You don't want to pull out drowned mice. It sucks.
5. You will want to monitor your buckets to make sure your dunks are good (they can be damaged by heat while stored for example). If your larvae reach pupa stage which looks like swimming commas, dump it and get new dunks.
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Date: 2025-05-24 09:27 pm (UTC)1. Straw works the absolute best for stagnant water that's not stinky from feet away. Green grass will smell to high heaven. Dried leaves are better but can still get pungent. Dried grass or straw is pretty much only smelly if you stir it up. It still ferments and grows attractive bacteria though.
2. You only need a quarter (1/4) of a dunk per bucket. The dose is calculated by surface area and a quarter of one will work just fine for five gallon buckets and less. That means one dunk lasts four months per bucket but it does need to be renewed every month.
3. If you aren't monitoring your buckets closely, don't do the dump method. Once it warms up, you can get from eggs to adults in as short as four days. Not an issue with dunks.
4. Either cover with a wide mesh screen or add a stick to your bucket so small animals that fall in can get out, especially if you're using a five gallon bucket or something else tall. You don't want to pull out drowned mice. It sucks.
5. You will want to monitor your buckets to make sure your dunks are good (they can be damaged by heat while stored for example). If your larvae reach pupa stage which looks like swimming commas, dump it and get new dunks.
Hope that helps!