Number 2 The window was not a used light source for the basement (Really, how many are?
• Number 3 The moisture was attracting Camel Crickets! Close in the window!! This is essentially a minimum expense with lasting benefits. Recently, it was necessary for me to enter the basement of a project to find and assess the availability of space in the electrical box for proposed outdoor lighting. When I turned on the light in the utility room of the basement, the walls seemed to move. I realized, to my horror, that there were about 10 Camel Crickets per square foot of wall space. My client informed me that they had always been there and had continued to bomb the area with an insecticide every month, or so, only to have them return. Thats POISON in a living environment! Who is going to suffer more? According to Dr. Raupp, Camel Crickets do not reproduce in the house; rather, they are coming in through window wells or wall cracks in the foundation. This basement had all the right ingredients to attract these hideous creatures. Our outdoor electrical project quickly became an exter