How to Keep Bugs Away From Your BBQ This Summer
There’s nothing quite like a summer BBQ in the Fraser Valley — burgers on the grill, cold drinks, good company, and the mountains in the background. Until the uninvited guests show up. Wasps dive-bombing your potato salad. Mosquitoes feasting on your ankles. Ants marching toward the chip bowl like they got the invite before your neighbours did.
If you want to keep bugs away from your BBQ this summer without dousing your patio in chemicals or hiding inside, you’re in the right place. Here’s what actually works — from setup strategies to long-term yard changes — based on what we see working across Maple Ridge, Coquitlam, and the rest of the Lower Mainland every summer.
The Usual Suspects at Your Fraser Valley BBQ
Different pests show up for different reasons, and knowing what draws them helps you fight back effectively.
Yellow Jackets and Wasps
The number one BBQ crashers. Yellow jackets are attracted to both protein (your steak, chicken wings, and burgers) and sugary drinks (pop, juice, beer, cocktails). They’re most aggressive from July through September when colonies reach peak size. Paper wasps are less aggressive but will investigate food sources near their nests. If you’re hosting in Maple Ridge or Pitt Meadows, where many backyards border natural areas, wasp encounters are practically guaranteed from mid-June onward.
Mosquitoes
Mosquitoes are drawn by carbon dioxide from your breathing, body heat, and certain body chemistries. They’re most active at dawn and dusk — which means that relaxed evening BBQ on the patio is prime mosquito time. In the Fraser Valley, our proximity to rivers, wetlands, and agricultural drainage (especially near the Pitt River and the Pitt Meadows lowlands) means above-average mosquito populations throughout summer.
Ants
Where there are crumbs, ants will follow. Carpenter ants and pavement ants are the most common species around Lower Mainland homes. A single dropped chip or a smear of sauce on the patio can establish a scent trail that brings dozens of ants to your gathering within minutes.
House Flies and Blow Flies
Flies are attracted to food, garbage, and organic waste. They’re a hygiene concern — landing on trash and then on your food — and a general nuisance. Warm summer temperatures accelerate their breeding cycle, and open garbage bins near your BBQ area are an open invitation.
Setup Strategies That Prevent Pest Problems
The most effective pest management at a BBQ happens before the first guest arrives. How you set up your outdoor space makes an enormous difference.
Position Your Food Strategically
Set up your food station and serving area away from the grill itself. The cooking smoke provides some pest deterrence around the BBQ, but your serving table — loaded with exposed food — is the real target. If possible, keep the food table on the opposite side of your patio from any gardens, compost bins, or garbage areas.
Cover everything. Mesh food covers (available at any dollar store or kitchen supply shop) are cheap, simple, and remarkably effective. Cover dishes when they’re not being actively served. Use pitchers with lids or covered drink dispensers instead of open bowls of punch.
Manage Your Garbage Like It Matters
Because it does. An open garbage bag near your entertaining area is a beacon for wasps, flies, and ants. Use garbage bins with tight-fitting lids and empty them frequently during the event. If possible, position your garbage bin 10 or more metres from the eating area. The same applies to recycling — rinse cans and bottles before tossing them.
Time Your Event to Avoid Peak Mosquito Hours
If mosquitoes are your primary concern, the timing of your BBQ matters. Mosquito activity peaks in the 30 minutes before sunset and remains high into the evening. An afternoon BBQ that wraps up by 7 p.m. avoids the worst of the mosquito window. If evening entertaining is the plan, see the deterrent section below — you’ll need active countermeasures.
Use Fans to Your Advantage
This is one of the most underrated pest control strategies for outdoor entertaining. Mosquitoes are weak flyers — a standard oscillating fan or a couple of box fans positioned around the seating area creates enough airflow to keep mosquitoes from landing. It also disrupts the carbon dioxide plume your body produces, making it harder for mosquitoes to locate you. As a bonus, the breeze keeps guests comfortable on warm Maple Ridge summer evenings.
Natural and Store-Bought Deterrents That Actually Work
Let’s separate the effective strategies from the Instagram myths.
What Works
- Wasp traps positioned AWAY from guests: Commercial wasp traps baited with a sugar-water-and-vinegar solution or a piece of raw meat (early summer) work well — but position them 5–10 metres away from your eating area. The trap draws wasps toward it and away from your table. Placing a trap right next to the food table defeats the purpose.
- Decoy wasp nests: Paper wasps are territorial and will avoid establishing nests near existing colonies. Hanging a decoy nest (a grey paper bag or commercial product) early in the season — by May — can reduce paper wasp activity in your entertaining area. This doesn’t work for yellow jackets.
- Thermacell-style mosquito repellers: These butane-heated devices release allethrin, a synthetic pyrethroid, into a zone of about 4–5 metres. They’re genuinely effective for creating a mosquito-reduced bubble around a seating area. Multiple units may be needed for larger patios.
- Mosquito coils: The old standby works. Pyrethrin-based coils create a low-level deterrent zone. Place them upwind of the seating area. They’re not as effective as Thermacell-type devices but cheaper to run.
- Citronella candles (with caveats): Citronella provides modest mosquito deterrence — about 30–50% reduction in biting — but only in the immediate vicinity of the candle. They’re better than nothing but shouldn’t be your only defence. Use them as a supplement, not a solution.
What Doesn’t Work (Despite What You’ve Heard)
- Dryer sheets: No scientific evidence supports the claim that dryer sheets repel mosquitoes or wasps. Save them for the laundry.
- Ultrasonic pest repellers: Multiple independent studies have found these devices ineffective against mosquitoes and other flying insects. Don’t waste your money.
- Pennies in a bag of water: The “bag of water with pennies” trick for deterring flies is folklore, not science. It doesn’t work.
- Essential oil diffusers at distance: While certain essential oils (eucalyptus, peppermint, lemongrass) have documented repellent properties in controlled conditions, a diffuser on your patio table won’t create a meaningful barrier in open air where the breeze disperses the oils within seconds.
Landscaping Your Yard to Reduce Pests Long-Term
If you entertain outdoors regularly — and in the Lower Mainland, summer patios are practically a lifestyle — investing in some landscaping changes pays off every season.
Eliminate Standing Water
Mosquitoes need standing water to breed, and they don’t need much — a bottlecap’s worth is enough. Walk your property and eliminate every source: plant saucers, old tires, clogged gutters, birdbaths (change water weekly), toys and containers that collect rain, and low spots in your yard that puddle. In Pitt Meadows and parts of Maple Ridge where the water table is high, drainage issues are especially common and contribute directly to local mosquito populations.
Keep Vegetation Trimmed
Mosquitoes rest in dense vegetation during the heat of the day. Overgrown hedges, tall grass, and dense ground cover within 10 metres of your entertaining area provide daytime harbourage. Keeping your grass mowed and hedges trimmed reduces the resting habitat near your patio.
Strategic Planting
While no plant is a magic bullet against pests, certain species have documented repellent properties and are worth incorporating near patios and outdoor dining areas:
- Lavender: Mildly repellent to mosquitoes and flies. Thrives in full sun and well-drained soil — common in Maple Ridge gardens.
- Lemongrass: Contains citronella compounds. Grow in large pots near seating areas (it’s an annual in our climate).
- Marigolds: Repellent to some aphids and mosquitoes. Plant them around the border of your patio or deck.
- Basil: The smell deters flies and mosquitoes. Keep pots on your outdoor dining table.
Deck and Patio Maintenance
Gaps between deck boards, cracks in patio pavers, and spaces under decks all provide harbourage for ants, spiders, and crawling insects. Keep your deck in good repair, seal gaps where possible, and ensure the space under your deck is clear of debris, old food, and standing water. In Coquitlam and Port Coquitlam, where many homes have elevated decks over sloped yards, the space under the deck often becomes an overlooked pest habitat.
When a Professional Pre-Event Treatment Makes Sense
If you’re hosting a significant event — a wedding reception, a milestone birthday, or a large family gathering — a professional perimeter treatment 24–48 hours before the event can dramatically reduce pest activity in your outdoor entertaining area.
What a Pre-Event Treatment Includes
A technician applies a targeted residual treatment to the perimeter of your entertaining area — along fence lines, around deck and patio edges, in vegetation borders, and in specific harbourage sites. This creates a zone of reduced insect activity that lasts 2–4 weeks. Any active wasp nests in the event area are treated and removed in advance.
Ongoing Summer Pest Management
For homeowners who entertain frequently, a seasonal pest management plan eliminates the need for event-by-event intervention. A program that includes monthly perimeter treatments from May through September keeps pest populations low around your outdoor living spaces all season long. Combined with the DIY strategies above, it makes a noticeable difference in the livability of your outdoor space.
The Quick Checklist: Your Next BBQ
Here’s the at-a-glance version to tape to your fridge before your next gathering:
- ☐ Cover all food when not being served
- ☐ Use closed-lid garbage and recycling bins, positioned away from the eating area
- ☐ Set up wasp traps 5–10 metres from the food table the morning of the event
- ☐ Position fans around the seating area for mosquito deterrence
- ☐ Light mosquito coils or fire up Thermacell devices 15 minutes before guests arrive
- ☐ Check yard for standing water and empty any containers
- ☐ Rinse cans and bottles before recycling
- ☐ Clean up food scraps and spills promptly during the event
- ☐ If hosting after 7 p.m., deploy additional mosquito countermeasures
Enjoy Your Summer — Without the Bugs
The Fraser Valley summer is short, and you deserve to enjoy every outdoor gathering without battling bugs for your plate. A little preparation goes a long way, and for the situations where DIY isn’t cutting it, professional help can transform your outdoor space.
Planning a summer event and want your yard pest-free? Call Canadian Pest Control at (778) 598-7378 or visit cpestcontrol.ca to schedule a free inspection or ask about our summer patio pest management programs. We help homeowners across Maple Ridge, Coquitlam, Port Coquitlam, and Pitt Meadows enjoy their backyards all season long.