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Worms trouble Portsmouth neighborhood
Jun 13, 2012 | 11787 views | 8 8 comments | 20 20 recommendations | email to a friend | print
<p>Photos by Frank Lewis</p><p>Letitia Reedy said her neighborhood of Mabert Road in Portsmouth has been overrun by worms (pictured inset).</p>

Photos by Frank Lewis

Letitia Reedy said her neighborhood of Mabert Road in Portsmouth has been overrun by worms (pictured inset).

slideshow

Frank Lewis

PDT Staff Writer

The people at the upper end of Mabert Road (2500 block) in Portsmouth are going through what can only be described as a living nightmare, and have not been able to find anyone who will help them. Worms have taken over not only their streets, steps, yards, porches, and the outside of their houses, but the inside as well.

“They are everywhere in my house,” Mary Lucas said. “They’re in the bedroom. They’re in the living room. They’re in the kitchen - every room in the house. They are all infested on these walls here. I can’t seem to control them and I’ve tried different sprays and I can’t seem to get them under control.”

Patty Schuyler said she was unable to sleep in her bed Monday night, and had to sleep in a recliner.

“At night the house is covered with them,” Schuyler said. “They’re starting to move inside the house now. I got out there last night and hosed everything down, and this morning they are all right back.”

Latisha Reedy said the worms have been covering nearly every property in her neighborhood for about two or three weeks.

“I have used bleach, bug killer, nothing works,” Reedy said. “I have been here since (19)73 and I have never seen anything like it.”

Reedy had a large container labeled “bleach,” and as she approaches a pile of the worms, the worms appeared to be dead, but one spray of the bleach and they come to life and begin to crawl all over the pavement and up the wall across from her house.

Reedy said she contacted the city and said she has been given one phone number after another, and no one has been able to help her. She said she called the City Health Department and was told they didn’t handle that kind of problem. She said she has also been in contact with the Ohio State University Extension Service in the Scioto County Courthouse who told the Times Tuesday morning that the man who might be able to help her, Brad Burgefurd, was out of the area for several days, and usually worked out of Pike County.

Jerrie Sutherland said the worms have invaded everything including her in ground pool.

“I’ve skimmed and swept and they just keep coming,” Jerrie Sutherland said. “They’re in the bathroom. The bathtub is full. They are everywhere.”

Mike Sutherland, who had just come from sharing a shower with the creatures, described the situation without mincing words.

“It’s an invasion, like an apocalypse.”

Frank Lewis may be reached at 740-353-3101, ext. 232, or at flewis@heartlandpublications.com



Comments
(8)
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bgerald2
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June 15, 2012
There are two products out there will kill these things on contact. The products are affordable and a common household product. The First one - Dawn dishwashing liquid. Go to Wal-mart or Lowes and pick up a 2 gallon pump sprayer. Fill it almost all the way up then pour a bottle of Dawn dishwashing liquid in it. Shake it up and spray away. Kills on contact.

The second product is 409 cleaner. Just spray them down and watch them die.
CarrieB@SSU
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June 14, 2012
I've never heard of such a thing. Then again, I guess just because we've never heard of it happening before doesn't mean that it hasn't happened in the past. The only thing I can think of this to be is, 1. an explosive breeding episode for them or 2. could be result of some sort of soil contamination. I think someone needs to go out there and take some soil samples just for "craps and giggles" especially since it doesn't seem that the Health Department wants to get involved. (Although the ladder portion may just be my inner conspiracy theorist coming out!)

Either way, I think I'll make my way up there to check it out! Very curious.
bgerald2
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June 18, 2012
It happens when we don't have a cold enough winter to kill them out. Not enough frost or snow for long enough time to freeze them out. Happens more often than we realize just not always to this magnitude.
Bexhall
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June 14, 2012
Check out the last part of this article:

http://www.accuweather.com/en/weather-news/why-do-earthworms-surface-afte/28916

It references worm swarms.
yojoe
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June 14, 2012
WHAT ABOUT Pure Earth D, DiatomaceousEarth.net

SRD:Centipede Swarm

http://www.dandwiki.com/wiki/SRD:Centipede_Swarm

SEEMS LIKE THOSE PEOPLE SHOULD BE EVACUATED AND THE AREA TREATED, WHERE'S THE HEALTH DEPT???

OFF ORGANIZING ON THEIR MOST RECENT ESCAPADE, "Health Coalition." WHAT DID THEY DO WITH THEIR '07 "CLEAN SWEEP."

THEIR DIRECTOR RETIRED.

AND THEY ARE GUARDING OUR HEALTH AND SAFETY -- LIFE AND LIMB PROTECTION. FAR OUT MAN........

COME ON PDT'S INVESTIGATE, THE HEALTH DEPT. SURE AIN'T.

fbrisker
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June 14, 2012
Try "Sevin" brand dust. Looks like your "worms" are actually Narceus americanus or millipedes
Flybabydi
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June 13, 2012
It's hard to tell in the picture, are these actual earthworms, or some sort of centipede? No fun either way, but just curious...
Neo74
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June 13, 2012
Bleach is not the answer. In fact, bleach wil l drive more worms up from the ground in order to escape its effects. Mrs. Lucas needs to use roach powder which contains nearly all boric acid. It is very affordable, environmentally friendly, and will dry the worms outer skin up. Just lay a path all around the house and no worm will make it past this line of defense.
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