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Posted (edited)

Anyone else having wasps coming into their house like an invading army?  There was a story on the Syracuse news about them recently.  I’m killing 2-3 dozen a day all around the inside of the house, mostly in and around the windows. Have an exterminator coming to try and find the nest(s).

 

Bastards.  
 

Keeps reminding me of the SNL Killer Bees skits. 

Edited by WotAGuy
  • Shocked 1
Posted

This time of year they've changed their focus to just providing for themselves before dying off for the winter. So they're after warmth and sugar. Combine this with a mild winter last year and there's a ton around. I had to deal with more nests during the hot months than I had before.

  • Agree 1
Posted

Yellow jackets are wasps, not bees.

 

Bees are beneficial and rarely sting. Wasps are ornery aggressive SOBs.

 

 

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Posted

we had a ground nest that i had a hard time getting rid of.  we finds some in our house here and there.  yesterday i noticed the front of the house was covered with dying bees...likely due to the drop in temps.  I lightly touched one, and even though still alive, it just flopped to the ground.

  • WotAGuy changed the title to Wasps (thanks for correction) are out of control this year
Posted

I've had intense "Battle of Stalingrad" battles with the German yellowjackets (ones that like a house) here in PA over the last three years.  I haven't seen any Eastern yellowjacket nests (ones in the ground).  The battleground is an epic waste of spray, dust, bodies, and often a field of destruction in siding, soffit and insulation.  I swear they have a heat camera like the Predator.

 

I've long suspected that the German yellowjacket is the cause of the decline in lanternfly here in PA.  The lanternflies are easy food sources for them.  More food, more family.  I also agree that milder winters that lack snow benefit the queens who are hibernating.  

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Posted
1 hour ago, teef said:

we had a ground nest that i had a hard time getting rid of.  we finds some in our house here and there.  yesterday i noticed the front of the house was covered with dying bees...likely due to the drop in temps.  I lightly touched one, and even though still alive, it just flopped to the ground.

 

I had one this summer by the foundation of the house that I battled unsuccessfully with for weeks - until one night a critter (raccoon?) took care of it for me.  

Posted
6 minutes ago, SinceThe70s said:

 

I had one this summer by the foundation of the house that I battled unsuccessfully with for weeks - until one night a critter (raccoon?) took care of it for me.  

same here.  i would spray multiple times, go to the hive, (they made a nest box for our irrigation) and they would be dead.  a few days later they were back.  it must have been very deep.

Posted
1 hour ago, teef said:

same here.  i would spray multiple times, go to the hive, (they made a nest box for our irrigation) and they would be dead.  a few days later they were back.  it must have been very deep.

 

I went through a few cans of spray too. Then I tried covering it - which really p!ssed them off, but they were persistent and made their way back in. I also hung up a bee trap which caught a lot of them, but the nest was still active until the critter dug up the nest.

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Posted

I had a ground nest, and both my son and I got stung. I tried spraying multiple times in the evening, but even at 10PM they were still some out and about and I could never kill the nest. Eventually we were leaving for a trip about 5AM and I sprayed before we left. When we got back they were gone. Nasty little suckers would swarm you if you got anywhere close! I do not love all of God’s creatures equally. 

Posted

I had four battles this year. I had one black wasp nest on a tree that looked like a beach ball. It was cartoonish. Took 3 sprays bottles To bring it down.

 

I have realized in my battle with the ground nests this past summer that sprays are useless. You need the powder. I dumped a ton of powder on one, and then dug it up, and did more powder the next night. That seemed to work. 
 

here is the powder:

 

https://www.amazon.com/Spider-Ground-Bee-Killer/dp/B00QV3YUUG/ref=mp_s_a_1_2?crid=30AR3B3U5HUO0&keywords=ground+bee+powder&qid=1696972621&sprefix=ground+bee+powder%2Caps%2C157&sr=8-2
 

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Posted (edited)

Two yrs ago we had wasps periodically flying around the 2nd floor of our house. Not a lot of them but one is too many for my liking. Went into the attic and discovered a whole bunch of the clay-like nests. Was going to exterminate them but also heard a colony of bats behind a wooden support beam next to the chimney. I held my hand to the board and could feel the bats moving around. They were feeding on the wasps. 
Bats are protected where we live so hired a wildlife removal expert to create an easy egress for them and then installed a bat exclusion device to drive them out. After they were removed, covered up all entry points to the attic, and a pest service used a smoke bomb in the attic to kill the wasps. Have not seen any wasps in the attic or house since that time.

Edited by Mr Info
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Posted
7 hours ago, WotAGuy said:

Anyone else having wasps coming into their house like an invading army?  There was a story on the Syracuse news about them recently.  I’m killing 2-3 dozen a day all around the inside of the house, mostly in and around the windows. Have an exterminator coming to try and find the nest(s).

 

Bastards.  
 

Keeps reminding me of the SNL Killer Bees skits. 

 

I blame it on the Dodge Stellantis Hornet car commercials.

 

 

  • Haha (+1) 1
Posted

¡Si! Wife was reworking the library window planters a few weeks ago and got stung in fave. It was Sunday morning.  She called me... I said: "Walk to Walgreens across street and get some Benedryl cream." 😏... I stayed a Holiday Inn Express one time...

Posted

Ground nest:

Go out at night (if you have a red headlamp(or red cellophane over a flashlight), they can't see it), pour some gas down the hole, cover it with a rag or tshirt and the fumes will do the work for you.

Yes, it's more fun to light it but that doesn't always get them all.

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Posted
43 minutes ago, Simon said:

Ground nest:

Go out at night (if you have a red headlamp(or red cellophane over a flashlight), they can't see it), pour some gas down the hole, cover it with a rag or tshirt and the fumes will do the work for you.

Yes, it's more fun to light it but that doesn't always get them all.


fire gas GIF

  • Haha (+1) 2
Posted
8 hours ago, SinceThe70s said:

 

I had one this summer by the foundation of the house that I battled unsuccessfully with for weeks - until one night a critter (raccoon?) took care of it for me.  

Ground nests are easily taken care of by inserting dry ice

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