The Carpenter ants in Saint-Laurent become active again as soon as temperatures consistently exceed 10°C, generally between mid-April and mid-May. In Saint-Laurent, where 1960s bungalows and wood-frame duplexes dominate, May also marks the dreaded time of swarming — when young winged queens leave their colony to found a new nest, sometimes right in your home.
If you've seen winged ants on the ceiling, small piles of fine sawdust under a window, or simply large black ants (12 to 18 mm) walking on your countertop at dusk, you've come to the right place. This local guide explains how recognize May swarming in Saint-Laurent, what it means for the structure of your home, and why this specific period is so important to Quebec entomologists.
Carpenter Ants Saint-Laurent: The Essentials
- The swarming of young queens takes place in but to the end of June in southern Quebec.
- Fine sawdust in a regular pile under a crack = active nest nearby (different from sawdust from a saw).
- A mature colony can have 2,000 to 5,000 individuals and a satellite nest at your place.
- The wooden bungalows and duplexes in Saint-Laurent (Hodge, Cardinal, Côte-Vertu) are particularly exposed.
- The preventive outdoor treatment recommended by Quebec specialists is traditionally carried out in May or June.

Why the month of May all changes for carpenter ants
Carpenter ant (Black carpenter ant In Quebec, [it] spends the winter in diapause, gathered in its main nest—often a rotten stump, a hollow log, or... a damp beam inside a house. When the stable outdoor temperature crosses the 10°C threshold, the workers begin to patrol again to find water and protein. But it's the second spring event that poses the real problem for Saint-Laurent homeowners: Reproductive swarming.
According to Radio-Canada, which covered the phenomenon with a Quebec entomologist, swarming generally occurs between late spring and early summer: «winged ants emerge from the nest to mate.» Specifically, hundreds – sometimes thousands – of young fertile queens simultaneously leave the mother colony, accompanied by winged males. After mating in flight, the males die quickly, and the fertilized queens leave. look for a nest. If they find damp, soft, or rotten wood nearby, they'll settle in — and the new colony will begin to excavate its tunnels in the following weeks.
This is precisely why May-June is the strategic window in the biological calendar: it's the time when a preventive intervention stops a new queen before she can establish, and when a targeted inspection can identify a satellite nest before it grows over the summer. Waiting until August means allowing a colony to grow from 50 to 2,000 individuals.
How recognize Swarming at home
Homeowners often confuse swarming with a classic ant «infestation.» Here are the specific signs to watch for during May in Saint-Laurent:
- Winged ants indoors, near windows or lights. Winged insects are attracted to light. If you find several on a basement windowsill or around a ceiling light, the satellite nest is probably already in the house — not outside.
- Pile of very fine sawdust (granular, like brown sugar). This is what's called «frass»: it's wood shavings and insect debris that the workers evacuate as they excavate galleries. It's typically found under basement windows, near door frames, or under a basement beam.
- Light rustling in a wall at night. A large colony is audible: a dry crackling can be heard, especially between 9 PM and 1 AM, when the ants are most active.
- Large black ants (12-18 mm) in the kitchen at dusk. Carpenter bees go out to look for sugar and protein. If you see several of them several evenings in a row, the nest is less than 30 meters away.
- Soft or hollow to the touch. Test simple: tap a window frame, the bottom of a door frame, or a basement joist with a screwdriver. A hollow sound + wood giving way = active galleries inside.
Beware of the classic confusion with the termites. In Quebec, subterranean termites exist (particularly in certain Montreal sectors) but remain rare in Saint-Laurent. Quick difference: carpenter ants do not swallow wood—they dig and evacuate it (hence the visible sawdust). Termites, on the other hand, digest it and leave almost nothing.
Why Saint-Laurent is an exposed neighborhood
Saint-Laurent combines several factors that make it a favorable environment for carpenter ants:
- Aging timber-framed real estate. The bungalows built between 1955 and 1975 dominate the Hodge, Cardinal, Côte-Vertu, and Bois-Franc sectors. Wooden window frames, wooden soffits, basement beams — all areas where moisture accumulates over the years.
- Wooded remnants and large mature hedges. Saint-Laurent retains wooded areas (Marcel-Laurin Park, Beaudet Park, the edges of the nearby Saraguay woods), decomposing stumps, and dead trees that house the mother colonies. It is from here that the young queens leave to swarm each May.
- Perimeter drainage sometimes fails. Several properties from the 60s and 70s have never had their waterproofing membrane redone. The result: chronic dampness at the bottom of exterior walls and at the base of basement windows—exactly what a young queen bee seeks to build her nest.
- Immediate proximity to industrial and wooded areas (Cavendish, Sartelon, Marcel-Laurin). These areas offer large volumes of exposed wood (pallets, structures) and derelict sites that serve as a reservoir.
How is a inspection targeted
A carpenter ant infestation isn't solved with a hardware store «spray» — quite the opposite. Spraying the surface only disperses the colony, which then creates several satellite nests — this phenomenon is called sprouting, and it is documented in all entomological literature. This is what a professional inspection process looks like, as it is practiced in Quebec.
Visual and acoustic diagnostics
The inspection begins with a thorough tour: exterior first (foundation, soffits, window frames, roof-wall junction, deck), then interior (basement, bathrooms, upper-floor ceilings). Typical tools include a screwdriver to test suspect wood, a flashlight to spot moisture stains, and sometimes a mechanical stethoscope to locate active nests behind walls.
Identification of the main nest versus satellite
Carpenter ants operate in a network: a main nest (usually outside, in a stump or tree) and one or more satellite nests (often inside the house, where there is warmth and humidity). If only the satellite nest is treated, the main nest will reintroduce workers, and the infestation will return within two months. Therefore, a thorough approach involves mapping the entire network before intervening, by tracking ant trails for 24 to 48 hours.
Baiting rather than spraying
The current reference method is a gelatinous bait based on boric acid or micro-dosed fipronil, which worker ants bring back to the nest. The queen and brood consume the bait, and the colony collapses in 7 to 21 days depending on its size. This is slower than a spray (which only kills on the surface), but it is the only approach that truly eliminates the source.
Perimeter barrier and seasonal monitoring
Once the nest is neutralized, an exterior perimeter barrier is applied in May-June, as recommended by the guides from Maheu Protection Parasitaire and Protégez-Vous. A follow-up visit at 14 days allows for verification that no recurrence has occurred, and a third visit at 60 days is useful during periods of high pressure.
Prevention Durable What you can do right now
Whether or not you currently have carpenter ants, these seasonal actions greatly reduce the risk of colonization in Saint-Laurent:
- Caulk windows, door frames, pipe penetrations, and vents. Any crack larger than 2 mm is an entry point for a young queen. Systematic inspection in April, just before swarming.
- Prune trees and shrubs that touch the house. A branch in contact with the roof or gutter is a direct bridge from the woods to the framing.
- Never stack firewood against the house. This is the classic trap: the outer sheathing houses a colony, which then colonizes the garage wall. Minimum storage 5 meters away and elevated.
- Fix any water leaks within 30 days. Rotting window frames, overflowing gutters, and leaking window air conditioners each create the humid microclimate that carpenter ants seek.
- Have the garden cords and stumps inspected each fall. A rotten maple stump at the back of the yard, that's often the source of the following spring swarming.
- Program an outdoor preventative spray in May or June if your property has already been affected or if your immediate neighbors have been.

Cas concrete A bungalow near Côte-Vertu in May 2025
In a case observed last year, a bungalow owner in 1968 near Côte-Vertu discovered about thirty winged ants on the basement bedroom windowsill one May morning. The house had never had a reported problem. The diagnosis revealed two things: rotted exterior window framing on the north side (water infiltration for three years, never detected), and a 31-inch maple stump at the back of the yard – the main nest.
Tracking plan:
- Gelatinous bait placed on indoor tracks.
- Direct treatment of the outer strain.
- Recommendation to replace the window frame within 30 days.
- Exterior perimeter barrier.
- Three follow-up sessions over six weeks.
Result: At 60 days, zero ants observed and sawdust more visible. The client had the frame replaced by a carpenter in July. No recurrence the following summer or in the spring of 2026.
The biological clock Spring to remember
To summarize what property owners in Saint-Laurent (and more broadly, in the West Island) gain from keeping in mind:
- Mid-April Awakening of workers in the outer nests, start of patrol.
- Early May activity on the slopes, observations in the kitchen.
- Bi-monthly until the end of June: Swarming of winged queens, a critical window for intervention.
- July-August: new colonies growing silently, cumulative damage.
- September-October: Winter recolonization, return to main nests.
The delay of a few weeks between the visible activity of the workers and swarming (the reproductive phase) is exactly what makes owners believe that «there's not much going on.» When the winged ants appear, the colony is already mature and the time to act is strictly limited.
Resources for your neighborhood
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