Gary,
I moved to a suburb of Phoenix 2 years ago from
Arkansas. I am still totally freaked out by the alien creatures. We did
adopt a cat after we moved here and he has so far killed his fair share
of scorpions in turn making him the king of this house in my books. I
have heard many different things about cats and scorpions, each one being
different. Our cat has never been stung and always is looking for them.
I personally believe the reason he does not get stung is because of his
thicker hide and fur along with the quickness cats possess and their ability
to see so well at night (the scorpions most active time). I believe your
cat would not only be safe, but also be your most valuable asset with these
nasty weird freaky alien scorpions.
Also, as far as locations....
I
have heard many different things and can honestly say from block to block
some people have them and some don't. We have fruit trees and them seems
to attract the bugs they like, but apparently if you have a larger amount
of lizards in your area they will eat the scorpion food source. Also we
spray every month and it has not made a difference thus far. They do become
less visible in the winter and I have been told they hibernate...so you
get a break.
Do be aware however you will not die from the bark
scorpion sting, but will be a bit miserable for a few hours. They tend
to run at you not away. You can search with a black light and a shoe and
kill them first (this makes me feel re-empowerd), and the smaller ones
tend to allow more venom just like snakes.
All in all, ArizonaArizona | (air-i'-ZON-u') | The State of Arizona comprises the extreme south-western portion of the United States. It is bounded on the north by Utah, on the east by New Mexico, on the south by Mexico, and on the west by California and Nevada. | is beautiful
in my books. No tornadoes, earthquakes, or hurricaines, so I deal.
amy
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