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Lets talk about wasp control.

MScott

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Joined
Jun 30, 2009
Messages
1,616
Location
Eastern Ontario
I have noticed something while cutting firewood. Twice in the last two years, I have cut down old trees which are infested with wasps. When I noticed the wasps buzzing around the fallen tree I took off (fortunately without getting stung) and left the tree alone for a while. Going back after a few days, I noticed that the tree was now swarming with dragon flies. A few more days and the dragon flies were gone and there were no more wasps. I cut the downed tree up and found the nests, but no live wasps. Apparently the dragon flies had eaten them. I have personally observed a dragon fly catch and eat a deer fly (on my arm) so I am not too surprised.
Of course, this will not help keep wasps out of your garage.:D
 
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Greeny

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Joined
Feb 25, 2013
Messages
572
Location
Shreveport, LA
Saw a video of a guy putting a piece of conduit into the opening of a large hornets nest, and then launching bottle rockets up the conduit, into the nest. Impressive explosion of the nest. I don't think it killed many hornets, but it sure looked like fun.
I use the shop vac on wasp nests within reach. Turn it on, vacuum up the wasps, put a piece of tape over the hose, turn off the vac and set it in the sun for the afternoon. Works great on yellow jackets too. Just set the hose on the ground next to the hive entrance.
Thinking about it now, I guess you could attach a stick of PVC to the shop vac and reach way up high, or stand way off to the side.
 

Greeny

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 25, 2013
Messages
572
Location
Shreveport, LA
I have noticed something while cutting firewood. Twice in the last two years, I have cut down old trees which are infested with wasps. When I noticed the wasps buzzing around the fallen tree I took off (fortunately without getting stung) and left the tree alone for a while. Going back after a few days, I noticed that the tree was now swarming with dragon flies. A few more days and the dragon flies were gone and there were no more wasps. I cut the downed tree up and found the nests, but no live wasps. Apparently the dragon flies had eaten them. I have personally observed a dragon fly catch and eat a deer fly (on my arm) so I am not too surprised.
Of course, this will not help keep wasps out of your garage.:D

This summer, I began beekeeping. We regularly saw dragonflies hanging around the house, and catching honeybees out of the air. I never knew they ate bees. I guess they eat wasps too!
 

Falcon67

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Joined
Jun 11, 2009
Messages
18,371
Location
Merkel, TX
Yard Guard or Wasp and Hornet spray is what I use. Note that the Wasp and Hornet will kill vegetation. I also give 'em a bare hand smack down in mid flight. They do like the pool. About two weeks ago I traced some persistent flights back to a shed next door (no house there). Maybe 8~10 nests in there - 50+ yellow jackets on call at least. Yard Guard in one hand, Wasp spray in the other - like a mini battle scene from Star Wars. Except, the Empire won this one. :)
 

SmartShoe

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Joined
Jul 27, 2013
Messages
62
I mix up a little one gallon pump up garden sprayer and mix in about a half cup of liquid dishwash soap like dawn or the generic equivalent from the sprawl-mart. Pump up the sprayer and start spraying. it knocks them out of the air and they die. It is also safe to use around pets and young ones and best of all it's cheap.

If you want to really stop them, go find some Orthene and mix it up per the directions. The local farm store here carries it. Spray the eaves and overhangs around your house and garage and no more wasps the whole summer. Now if only I could get rid of those pesky horse flies...
 

JRC3

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Joined
Jun 30, 2014
Messages
12,481
Location
Southwestern OH
I mix up a little one gallon pump up garden sprayer and mix in about a half cup of liquid dishwash soap like dawn or the generic equivalent from the sprawl-mart. Pump up the sprayer and start spraying. it knocks them out of the air and they die. It is also safe to use around pets and young ones and best of all it's cheap.

I've been doing something almost identical for about 20 years now. I find wasps all the time when I do residential window cleaning. They like to nest exactly where I need to go. I basically have a 32oz bottle with a hole in the lid I use to wet my mop. I use the exact same bottle on wasps. Roughly 2 tsp of Dawn and water. I've killed thousands this way. When you're hanging from a ladder you learn what works. I've also learned what triggers them. If they are buzzing around you keep still and as I say, "act like a tree and they will treat you like a tree" and leave you alone.

I'm not sure what type wasp this is but they nest by dragging in grass between the window sash and the frame. This is the first time I ever caught on dragging prey in (grasshopper). Watch the vid all the way, I get a little closer and clearer towards the end.
 

ssdave

Banned
Joined
Apr 11, 2015
Messages
2,913
Location
Eastern Oregon
To get rid of yellow jackets, fill a gallon milk jug about half full of water. Add in the seeds/mush from inside a cantaloupe to it, and hang it in a tree. Yellow jackets will swarm to it, crawl in to eat, and die in the water. You can collect a jug full of them in a few days. Throw that jug away and start in again.

You can also bait the jug with a small quantity of hamburger late in the fall. As the days start to cool off, they go to meat better than to the cantaloupe.

Yellow wasps are easier to get rid of, just knock down their nests early in the morning when it's cool. Stomp on the nest and throw it away in the trash. If you get a lot of wasps inside your garage late in the fall, just shop vac them up. They die in a few hours in the vac, and you can dump them out into the garbage. You can use a piece of PVC pipe to extend your reach.

Or, as suggested earlier, mix a half cup or so of dishwasher detergent per gallon of water, and spray them to kill them.
 

SuperCat

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Joined
Jan 6, 2012
Messages
1,100
Location
Sacramento, CA
I constantly look for wasp nests, usually find them in the eaves, edge of the roof, and/or back of the rain gutters. I use wasp and hornet spray in the evening, hosing down the nest until it is soaked. Wait a day or two, knock it down and crush it flat. The traps don't seem to work very well for me, but inside the garage they may be worth a try. (As long as it doesn't involve rotting fish, meat, or other putrid, fragrant baits.) :thumbup:
 

My Old Tools

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Joined
Jun 4, 2014
Messages
5,427
Location
Hamrick Lake, TX
Got stung by about 40 yellow jackets last Summer. Stopped the lawn mower over their nest and didn't know it. Came back 15 min later and restarted it and they swarmed. Felt tlike I has walked into a spiders web for just a minute and then I looked down ans saw all of the little Fu%^$#s. Wife is still laughing at the dance I did all over the yeard trying to loose em. Could hardly walk for a few days there was so much venom in my leg muscles. Doc prescribed some Steroids and whoweee did that make it feel better. Anyway unloaded 2 cans of wasp killer into the nest the next day to kill as many of the little fu&*^%$ as I could and then left a good sized piece of raw fish at the entry to the nest. Worked like a charm a racoon or skunk came to eat the fish and helped themselves to the nest too. Must have been a doozy he left a 2 foor hole in the ground but no signs of nest left. Stinging insects ****! Oh btw my Dr said with repeated stings you can actually become allergic to em, beware!

It can go either way, you can get allergic or you can get immune. I'm a beekeeper so I get "vaccinated" periodically. Now a days it's about like a mosquito bite, it itches for a day or two.
 

CN Spots

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Joined
Apr 21, 2016
Messages
3,064
Location
NW Mississippi
Pre-spray everywhere you have problems with them (eaves, corners, old Camaros, etc.) in the spring with Malathion in a pump sprayer.
 

johnnyradiant

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Joined
Mar 27, 2017
Messages
833
Location
Vancouver, BC
I constantly look for wasp nests, usually find them in the eaves, edge of the roof, and/or back of the rain gutters. I use wasp and hornet spray in the evening, hosing down the nest until it is soaked. Wait a day or two, knock it down and crush it flat. The traps don't seem to work very well for me, but inside the garage they may be worth a try. (As long as it doesn't involve rotting fish, meat, or other putrid, fragrant baits.) :thumbup:

If you leave up the now dead nest new wasps looking for a new development site will find a different location as they see the area to be currently occupied.

The best eradication I can remember was one done by my dad. Nest was underground. He waited till dark when they were all snug in their beds. Poured in some gas and ignited it (from a lit rag on a long stick). Nice flaming torch, and as the hole was fairly small there was a battle with the flame to shoot out and the air to **** in to replenish the flames. Made for a really cool undulating flame for a few minutes.

Usually I use a can of the foaming type spray if I can get to their entrance. If I can see the nest out int the open and don't care to leave it up a shot with the hose at night usually does a pretty quick and painless job.

If you need a flashlight at night to get to the nest set it up away from you. If the 'sentries' are disturbed they will fly down the beam of light sometimes.
 

Greeny

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Joined
Feb 25, 2013
Messages
572
Location
Shreveport, LA
If you need a flashlight at night to get to the nest set it up away from you. If the 'sentries' are disturbed they will fly down the beam of light sometimes.

This would be a great opportunity to ask a neighbor to help. "All I need is for you to hold the light"....
 
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awdblazer

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Joined
Oct 17, 2011
Messages
1,100
Location
winnipeg, manitoba, canada
when i was in the states a few weekends ago i picked up one yellowjacket trap at walmart for like 3 bucks https://www.walmart.com/ip/Rescue-Yellow-Jacket-Trap-Insect-Control-1-unit/17134652
within three days there was about 3 inches of dead wasps in the bottom which by there standards equates to 900 wasps!!!
i need to buy more of those when i go down to the states again
i bought two of these just the other day, so far each one has about 20 in them
https://www.homedepot.ca/en/home/p.wasp-trap-for-wasps-and-yellow-jackets.1000507581.html
 

Falcon67

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Joined
Jun 11, 2009
Messages
18,371
Location
Merkel, TX
The best eradication I can remember was one done by my dad. Nest was underground. He waited till dark when they were all snug in their beds. Poured in some gas and ignited it (from a lit rag on a long stick). Nice flaming torch, and as the hole was fairly small there was a battle with the flame to shoot out and the air to **** in to replenish the flames. Made for a really cool undulating flame for a few minutes

Used to do that with red ant beds. A good shot of gas and a fire cracker. Ant bully, big time. Too much dry kindling around here, so it's blah feed them an Amdro snack.
 

ard

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Joined
Feb 16, 2015
Messages
4,391
Location
Sierra Foothills... California
Anyone see some of the metal sculptures where they pour the molten metal into an ant nest? Then dig it our once solid...

Google it.

I like the disclaimers: "No ants were injured in this process. We only use abandoned nests"

Right.
 

PCMusicGuy

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 15, 2009
Messages
851
Location
Houston, TX
Some of my family has experience with the sky blue colored paint used on the ceiling of their porches and have had great success. The mud dobbers and paper wasps used to make their nest there and since the paint has gone in, they no longer do. My parents just used this in their big porch so time will tell if it works for them too.
 

Baydog

Member
Joined
Jun 17, 2017
Messages
23
Certain spiders take care of the mud dobbers for me. But then I have spiders all over to worry about. These spiders remind me of a black widow in shape only, with really spindly legs, but their bodies are white and speckled (but they are not a marbled weaver that I can tell). I smacked a day old mud dobber nest in my barn yesterday with a hammer expecting larvae to fall out, and all that was in there was two of those spiders. They'd taken care of the bastards.


And I don't worry so much anymore after really investigating what Ohio has in my location. But the damn funnel weavers making webs in between my siding and posts, and then come charging out to see what feast they've caught when I'm disturbing the area, sure are funny to watch.

Those spiders weren't eating the mud dubbers, it's the other way around. Those blue/black daubers build the tube nest and lay an egg all the way at the end. Then they hunt spiders, paralize them , stuff the rest of the tube full of the still alive but paralized spiders and seal the end. The egg hatches and the larva eats its way out. By the time it's eaten all the spiders, it pupates into a adult wasp and repeats the cycle.

Mud daubers don't sting. When they are flying around you, they are just inspecting you for spiders, like any other inatimate object. Means you need to move more!

When the spiders start to get out of hand in one of the sheds, I just leave the doors open for a few days, and the daubbers will work them over pretty good. Call me crazy, but i've actully put up nesting boxes for them. They really like bat boxes, and fill those full of mud tubes.

Paper wasps (the red/brown ones) hunt spiders too, but they will sting if you piss them off. Still when they seem to not be leaving you alone when you are sitting around, they're just on the hunt.

Yellow jackets are a different story. They're evil incarnate. A little gaslone down the nest opening in the ground after dark fixes them pretty quick. They usually have two entrance holes though, so make sure you know were both are before you start screwing with them to prevent the sneak attack.
 

Texsun

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Joined
Mar 23, 2012
Messages
148
Surprised this pic hasn't surfaced by now...

images
 

LeonardY

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Joined
Apr 16, 2011
Messages
5,033
Location
Southern California
For fun, I will sit about 30 feet away and shoot them with an airsoft gun. I wait for them to hover just outside the nest. Sometimes at night I shoot black widows too.

Yes, the neighbors think I'm nuts but I prefer it that way.:shoot5:

Otherwise it's Ortho wasp killer.
 

EOC_Jason

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Joined
Jun 25, 2012
Messages
11,388
Location
Bentonville, AR
Spiders eat the flies and gnats flying around... Wasps eat the spiders... As long as they don't make a nest around my front or back door or fly around in my garage I'm okay with the cycle of nature doing its thing.

One thing I have learned is the Spectracide wasp & hornet spray doesn't work worth a darn. I soaked down a wasp several times, all he did was shake himself off and keep flying around me. Some carb cleaner and a lighter did the trick though. Did some reading and seems to be a lot of complaints. Raid brand had much better reviews, but since I bought some at the store I haven't had a chance to use it.
 
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