If a pet eats a mothball made of paradichlorobenzene they may have vomiting tremors and or abdominal pain.
Mothballs in your attic.
Exposure to large quantities of naphthalene or paradichlorobenzene can lead to headaches nausea vomiting diarrhea or eye and nose irritation and coughing.
While moth balls might effectively deter squirrels and other rodents from infiltrating your attic you could end up harming your health and the health of the people who live in your home.
However mothballs work on snakes much like an unknown place without a map works on us.
While mothballs are meant to keep moths away from clothing wool blankets and similar stored goods some people have used them to keep animals away from gardens or even out of the attic.
The mothballs are quite effective at keeping them away.
While it is true mothballs have a strong smell if these are added to large areas you will barely notice they are even there.
The question is if they are equally as useful in keeping a bat away.
Moths love to chew at clothing like wool and they can ruin clothes that you have put in your attic or closet.
Any such use is illegal.
Some folks have said that if you put mothballs in areas where you have noticed mouse activity the mice do not travel through this area again.
Often mothballs are used in these locations to control pests other than clothes moths stone said.
Mothballs produced in the u s.
This is totally wrong.
They include squirrels skunks deer mice rats dogs cats raccoons moles snakes pigeons and a variety of other animals.
Use mothballs under the house or in the attic.
Since moth balls take oxygen from the air keeping them in your attic is similar to running your car engine in a garage with the door shut.
Mothballs should not be used inside attics crawl spaces gardens trash cans or vehicles.
Use mothballs to rid your yard of snakes.
Unlike other pests snakes can t smell very well.
Mothballs are the little spherical objects that are used to keep moths away from your clothes when you store them.