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🍎 Keep your fruits safe and your conscience clear!
The Codling Moth & Oriental Fruit Moth Trap is a pesticide-free, eco-friendly solution designed to protect your fruit trees from destructive moths. Each pack contains two traps that utilize a natural pheromone lure, ensuring safety for humans, animals, and beneficial insects while providing up to 8 weeks of effective moth control.






















| Best Sellers Rank | #22,326 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ( See Top 100 in Patio, Lawn & Garden ) #576 in Pest Control Traps |
| Customer Reviews | 4.0 out of 5 stars 567 Reviews |
G**K
Moths go in and don’t come out
Effective if you put them up before being inundated with moths. Eventually need removed. Hold up surprisingly well.
U**8
They help
The first couple years my apple trees started bearing fruit, pretty much ALL my apples were very much worm-eaten. Like every single one. I really didn't know what I was doing back then. Now I get these moth traps together with Trichogramma wasps and I'm also vigilant all year picking fruit off that shows signs of worms. I'm not sure how beneficial any one of these treatments alone is, but taken together, I get lots and LOTS of good fruit with NO chemical pesticides. I can see that these catch lots of moths, so they must be contributing significantly to the cause. The only problem is that they are a bit pricey--I have 3 trees spread out across my yard and for areas with lots of moths (like mine) you should do 2 traps per tree and you are supposed to change the traps once or even twice during the growing season. At the current asking price of $15 for a pair, that's up to $135 just on these traps. Considering you can buy (non-organic) apples at the store for somewhere around a dollar a pound, that means I would need to get at least 135 pounds of worm-free apples in order to make this pay for itself (add the price of eating pesticides--whatever that is to you). I compromise. I'm ok having several wormy apples (I can cut the bad parts out and make applesauce), so I just buy 1 or 2 of these for the year and call that good. That works pretty well. With all my efforts put together, I get about 1/4 of a harvest that is worm-free and then I get a lot of apple sauce, apple crisp, apple bread and other apple-y things. 1/4 may not sound great, but it's a LOT better than what I was getting before.
C**C
I like the size of these
Tim gonna tell on these, but they’re in my tree. They’ve already caught some bugs. I could fill the tack Smilth a couple times. Since I put them up, they didn’t fall and the size is very
S**C
Not wind friendly
Product seemed easy enough to set up and place in trees. I wish I was able to see it catch moths but unfortunately we had some wind and rain right after I put them up and the twist ties that came with them just didn't work. They were constantly falling down. Basically I wasted my money there, but perhaps not the fault of the trap? The inclement weather happened to coincide with the trap placement before the bloom onset. I want to try these again but wish they were a little cheaper considering its a piece of cardboard and a twist tie. Lots of other bugs got stuck but few moths. Again, not sure if this was a result of the weather or the trap failed to lure.
F**N
I like it
I used this trap before. Lots of beastly codling moths trapped
W**G
Totally useless, did not even caught a single codling moth
I hang the two traps since May. My two apple trees are now totally infected with codling moth larvae. 9 out of 10 apples have worms inside. Not even a single codling moth was caught in the two traps from May to August. The traps just caight a lot of small moths and a hoenet but no codling moth. Do not waste your money.
J**R
Traps won't stay in proper tent shape.
The adhesive is fine, but the traps keep folding themselves up. I keep fixing it, but it has likely exposed both the glue and attractant to the weather more than ideal.
S**K
THEY WORK!!!
I've been trying everything for those darn coddling moths (stockings on each and every apple, sprays, wraps, etc.) and finally I think I've found the answer. I'd put off trying this because of the expense, but once I hung 2 of these in my tree (in the off season, no less) and saw the number of moths stuck on the paper after just 10 days, I am sold. I will now have these always in my tree - along with other eco-friendly means and I think this coming season I'll see a big difference in the number of apples with worms in them.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
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