Using bug spray as a flamethrower is inefficient: the heat reaches faster the bug than the flame itself and could cause it to escape. If you want to kill a bug with BLOOD AND FIRE and burning down your house in the process, the best way is using something with a good amount of alcohol, using with a squeezable bottle so you can push it and throw a stream of alcohol, lit a small amount of alcohol and then redirect the flames with the stream to the bug.
Using bug spray as a flamethrower is inefficient: the heat reaches faster the bug than the flame itself and could cause it to escape. If you want to kill a bug with BLOOD AND FIRE and burning down your house in the process, the best way is using something with a good amount of alcohol, using with a squeezable bottle so you can push it and throw a stream of alcohol, lit a small amount of alcohol and then redirect the flames with the stream to the bug.
Nah. The most effective way should be dousing the whole building in gasoline and let some (and I mean as much as possible) vaporize into the air. After that, you only need a spark to kill the thing and yourself along with the house efficiently.
(Of course killing bugs with flame is inefficient! No matter what form it takes. Just use bug srpay like a normal human being would have been enough.)
Nah. The most effective way should be dousing the whole building in gasoline and let some (and I mean as much as possible) vaporize into the air. After that, you only need a spark to kill the thing and yourself along with the house efficiently.
(Of course killing bugs with flame is inefficient! No matter what form it takes. Just use bug srpay like a normal human being would have been enough.)
Bug spray is an inadequate way of expressing yourself when dealing with pests. It's not enough to kill them. They have to know how you feel as you do so.
(Of course killing bugs with flame is inefficient! No matter what form it takes. Just use bug srpay like a normal human being would have been enough.)
Coackroaches tend to fly when I spray them insecticide, and I've dealt with scorpions and centipedes before and the most terrific stuff I've seen is a motherfucking venomous bug running towards you, so I want to kill them as fast as I can and from a couple of meters afar, that's why the napalm streamer.
Also, some people prefer to use spray cooking oil or hair spray as a flamethrower to deal with wasps and hornets, because they get aggressive when they get bathed in insecticide.
Never had any problem with cockroaches (or any bugs), because I just multipurposed the fly swatter. You know those sticky rollers you can peel off? Take the sticky paper, double tape it to your fly swatter, and whack the cockroach. When it stuck to the sticky paper, peel off the paper with the cockroach trapped on it and you may subject the G to any torture you want...it can't escape.
Most bug spray works by clogging the pores they use to breathe and slowly choking them to death. I'm sure a slow, agonizing death as they panic to try to escape a death they cannot understand expresses your contempt for their existence better than a quick roasting.
I thought most bug sprays were pyrethrins and organophosphates. These cause death by hyperstimulation of the nerves. I'm not sure that asphyxiation is involved.
I thought most bug sprays were pyrethrins and organophosphates. These cause death by hyperstimulation of the nerves. I'm not sure that asphyxiation is involved.
Thanks, now I got a new belief that the cockroach achieved death by orgasm.
I thought most bug sprays were pyrethrins and organophosphates. These cause death by hyperstimulation of the nerves. I'm not sure that asphyxiation is involved.
Not quite hyperstimulation but rather destroying their nervous systems. But of course, it causes them the greatest pain can be imagined leading to their death.
Rathurue said:
Thanks, now I got a new belief that the cockroach achieved death by orgasm.
That's why some species just reproduces without mating.