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Get Rid of Yellowjackets
Will the "family" please advice me on how to get rid of the yellowjackets
nesting around the fish pond. |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
See http://userpages.umbc.edu/~rrhudy1/pcare.htm#wasp On Sat, 23 Aug 2003, Ghislain wrote: Will the "family" please advice me on how to get rid of the yellowjackets nesting around the fish pond. ----------------------------------------------------------------- Chemist, preservationist, animal lover, aquarist, and ponder. - Extensive web pages on animals, fish, and ponds. - http://userpages.umbc.edu/~rrhudy1/ - http://www.fishpondinfo.com Free pond newsletter - sign up at my web site - Finally! Buy Robyn's Pond Book at www.1stbooks.com - ----------------------------------------------------------------- _ _ (o)____(o) ---ribbit _/ oo \_ / \----------/ \ \ | | | | / ww ooo ooo ww |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
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"Robyn Rhudy" wrote in message ... See http://userpages.umbc.edu/~rrhudy1/pcare.htm#wasp On Sat, 23 Aug 2003, Ghislain wrote: Will the "family" please advice me on how to get rid of the yellowjackets nesting around the fish pond. ----------------------------------------------------------------- Chemist, preservationist, animal lover, aquarist, and ponder. - Extensive web pages on animals, fish, and ponds. - http://userpages.umbc.edu/~rrhudy1/ - http://www.fishpondinfo.com Free pond newsletter - sign up at my web site - Finally! Buy Robyn's Pond Book at www.1stbooks.com - ----------------------------------------------------------------- _ _ (o)____(o) ---ribbit _/ oo \_ / \----------/ \ \ | | | | / ww ooo ooo ww |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
Thank you ever so much.Your imformation is very interesting.
Your site is well done I added it to My Favorite I made a copy of section 2 and 6. Thanks again to the "Newsgroups Family"for the response. Sincerely Ghislain "Robyn Rhudy" wrote in message ... See http://userpages.umbc.edu/~rrhudy1/pcare.htm#wasp On Sat, 23 Aug 2003, Ghislain wrote: Will the "family" please advice me on how to get rid of the yellowjackets nesting around the fish pond. ----------------------------------------------------------------- Chemist, preservationist, animal lover, aquarist, and ponder. - Extensive web pages on animals, fish, and ponds. - http://userpages.umbc.edu/~rrhudy1/ - http://www.fishpondinfo.com Free pond newsletter - sign up at my web site - Finally! Buy Robyn's Pond Book at www.1stbooks.com - ----------------------------------------------------------------- _ _ (o)____(o) ---ribbit _/ oo \_ / \----------/ \ \ | | | | / ww ooo ooo ww |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
"Ghislain" wrote in message
... Will the "family" please advice me on how to get rid of the yellowjackets nesting around the fish pond. Around here (Oregon) many yellow jackets live in a hive underground with just a small hole, 1/2" dia., for an entry. Find and mark the hole(s) during the day and then wait until after dark when they will all be in the nest. There will be a couple guard yellowjackets at the entrance. Just pour about a 1/2 cup of gasoline down the hole and stuff something like a paper towel into the hole to plug it up. The next day get a shovel and dig up the nest. Some nests are small like a tennis ball and I've seen them as big as a basketball. When the gas hits the yellowjacket they stop moving in about 3 seconds so there is very little to be concerned about at night. Some people express concern about putting gas in the dirt but it is easy to let it evaporate the next day. That's basically all they do when a gas station has to clean up a leak. If they are in a hanging nest, again wait until after dark and zap them with a can of hornet killer that sprays 10-20 feet. -bill |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
Thanks for the advice,'Bill"
"bill brown" wrote in message ... "Ghislain" wrote in message ... Will the "family" please advice me on how to get rid of the yellowjackets nesting around the fish pond. Around here (Oregon) many yellow jackets live in a hive underground with just a small hole, 1/2" dia., for an entry. Find and mark the hole(s) during the day and then wait until after dark when they will all be in the nest. There will be a couple guard yellowjackets at the entrance. Just pour about a 1/2 cup of gasoline down the hole and stuff something like a paper towel into the hole to plug it up. The next day get a shovel and dig up the nest. Some nests are small like a tennis ball and I've seen them as big as a basketball. When the gas hits the yellowjacket they stop moving in about 3 seconds so there is very little to be concerned about at night. Some people express concern about putting gas in the dirt but it is easy to let it evaporate the next day. That's basically all they do when a gas station has to clean up a leak. If they are in a hanging nest, again wait until after dark and zap them with a can of hornet killer that sprays 10-20 feet. -bill |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
Be very careful about using insecticides anywhere near a pond -- there was
a thread here a week or two ago about fish dying in a pond, and it turned out that somehow the water was flowing over ground where wasp spray had dripped (months ago, maybe?) then going back into the pond, killing the fish. I'd also suggest that you *not* pour gasoline onto the ground, as I don't think it's all that simple to deal with the gasoline-soaked soil. Anne Lurie Raleigh, NC "Ghislain" wrote in message ... Will the "family" please advice me on how to get rid of the yellowjackets nesting around the fish pond. |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
Do NOT pour gasoline into the ground. Do NOT use insecticide near a pond (fish
gills absorb any trace of poison in the water and the fish dies). For an underground nest, spray whip cream in the entrance at night. I am not kidding. Millions of years of evolution have not prepared yellow jackets for whipped cream. For a hanging nest, get a flashlight and a pole and knock it down to the ground at night. It will be abandoned in a few days, unless it's huge. In that case you can boot it away somewhere at night (wasps generally refuse to fly in low light levels). Solitary wasps like the monstrous looking cicada killers and pepsid wasps (tarantula hawks) will not sting you unless you grab one. Don't do that. Mark Ervin |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
Mark wrote Millions of years of evolution have not prepared yellow jackets
for whipped cream. I don't think we are prepared to deal with it either! k30a and the watergardening labradors http://www.geocities.com/watergarden...dors/home.html |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
OK, I'll bite! What does whipped cream do to them? Is it the density or
something? Shoot, they dig through the dirt easily enough. Hmmmm - I 'd REALLY have to keep the dogs away! Lee "M4RV1N" wrote in message ... Do NOT pour gasoline into the ground. Do NOT use insecticide near a pond (fish gills absorb any trace of poison in the water and the fish dies). For an underground nest, spray whip cream in the entrance at night. I am not kidding. Millions of years of evolution have not prepared yellow jackets for whipped cream. For a hanging nest, get a flashlight and a pole and knock it down to the ground at night. It will be abandoned in a few days, unless it's huge. In that case you can boot it away somewhere at night (wasps generally refuse to fly in low light levels). Solitary wasps like the monstrous looking cicada killers and pepsid wasps (tarantula hawks) will not sting you unless you grab one. Don't do that. Mark Ervin |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
"Ghislain" wrote in message ...
Will the "family" please advice me on how to get rid of the yellowjackets nesting around the fish pond. We had hoards of wasps around our pond a couple of years ago. I got one of those glass insect traps that has a hole in the bottom of it. You fill the trap with something insects like (e.g sugar water) and just set it out away from where you like to hang out in the yard. The insects crawl or fly up through the hole in the bottom of the jug in search of the sweetness inside, and then they can't find their way out, so they buzz around inside the jug, get tired, drop into the water, and drown. I probably caught over 300 wasps over the course of the summer using this little device. For the past 2 years, I haven't had nearly the wasp population that I have had in the past. This trap doesn't appear to attract bees, which is good, because I like to have them hanging around to pollinate. Also, last year, the trap was death on the little black ants we have. A lot of yard and garden supply places carry the traps, as well as mail order catalogs. I think I got mine from Jerry Baker for about $20. I'm sure there are less expensive alternatives - I just like the looks of the glass jar sitting in the garden. It does seem that it is not as effective early in the season when there is more natural food around, but it works particuarly well in Aug. & Sept. Maybe I have a masochistic streak, because I admit that I get some small joy out of watching the wasps buzz around in the jug until they give up and drop dead. It's paybacks for all the times I got stung! |
Get Rid of Yellowjackets
Lee Brouillet
writes: For an underground nest, spray whip cream in the entrance at night. I am not kidding. Millions of years of evolution have not prepared yellow jackets for whipped cream. OK, I'll bite! What does whipped cream do to them? Is it the density or something? Shoot, they dig through the dirt easily enough. First, the ones trapped inside die of asphyxiation. I assume the ones that try to travel through whipped cream spin their wheels (so to speak) and can't get anywhere. I had a nest right by the pond edge a few years ago, and I went out at night with a bright flashlight covered in red plastic (insects can't see in red light), put on a rubber glove (I didn't take chances), and sprayed canned whipped cream in the entrance. This was a big underground nest, with workers coming and going by dozen every minute during the day. They would attack if you were within a few feet of the entrance. Miracle of the modern world, canned whipped cream to the rescue. I used a whole can so there was quite a mound there. In a day it shrank down and dried; no yellow jacket ever emerged, as far as I know. If one did, it did not fly very well! Hmmmm - I 'd REALLY have to keep the dogs away! Yes. If they ate their way down to the bottom it could become a surprisingly spicy dessert. Mark Ervin |
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