Gardening is rewarding, but ants can be a real nuisance—disturbing soil, damaging roots, and protecting aphids
that harm plants. Many use chemicals to fight them, but my nana taught me a safer, natural trick that works instantly: cinnamon.
By sprinkling ground cinnamon around garden beds, she created an invisible barrier ants refuse to cross.
The strong scent disrupts their pheromone trails, confusing them and keeping colonies away. Use about
one teaspoon per foot of soil, reapplying after rain. Within hours, the ants disappear—no chemicals, no harm to pets or pollinators.
Ants thrive in gardens because of food, moisture, and shelter, but cinnamon interrupts their communication and movement.
Unlike sprays, it’s eco-friendly, biodegradable, and safe near vegetables. Just avoid coating plant leaves directly.
Gardeners everywhere report success: one light sprinkle, and ant trails vanish almost overnight.
To keep results strong, maintain a continuous cinnamon line and control related issues like aphids or standing water.
Cinnamon is part of a growing list of simple, natural garden hacks—like coffee grounds for slugs or eggshells for snails.
Nana’s method proves that sometimes the best pest control isn’t in a bottle—it’s already sitting on your kitchen shelf.