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#1
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Wasps
I find 193 posts on wasps in this group but can not find an answer to "
how long will a nest survive after all entrances exits have been sealed ? " I have calked all I can find at night so I think they are all inside. |
#2
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p4o2 wrote:
I find 193 posts on wasps in this group but can not find an answer to " how long will a nest survive after all entrances exits have been sealed ? " I have calked all I can find at night so I think they are all inside. Adults may survive a long time as you'll not make it airtight and there well may be alternate routes they can use to escape that you don't know about. The eggs they've laid will winter over and hatch next spring. IOW, that ain't the most promising way to get rid of them. |
#3
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p4o2 writes:
I find 193 posts on wasps in this group but can not find an answer to " how long will a nest survive after all entrances exits have been sealed ? " I would expect until cold weather kills them off. They may be like many other insects that cannibalize each other to survive as a colony. You likely mean hornets or yellow jackets, not wasps. A better technique is to put repellants at the exit rather than an absolute barrier. Then they'll go out under a compulsion, but not back in. |
#4
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Richard J Kinch wrote:
.... You likely mean hornets or yellow jackets, not wasps. Why? A "yellow jacket" is a wasp... |
#5
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In article . com, p4o2
@webtv.net says... I find 193 posts on wasps in this group but can not find an answer to " how long will a nest survive after all entrances exits have been sealed ? " I have calked all I can find at night so I think they are all inside. You won't be able to seal them well enough to contain them in a house. If you have been able to keep them from getting to the outside, you'll know by the activity found inside. -- Lar to email....get rid of the BUGS |
#6
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#7
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Duane Bozarth writes:
You likely mean hornets or yellow jackets, not wasps. Why? A "yellow jacket" is a wasp. Yeah, a type of wasp, but not usually called that. Wasps by name usually refers to solitary or small colonies built from mud or paper outdoors, not the huge colonies of yellow jackets built inside enclosed locations. |
#8
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On Sat, 03 Sep 2005 13:45:15 -0500, Richard J Kinch
wrote: | Duane Bozarth writes: | | You likely mean hornets or yellow jackets, not wasps. | | Why? A "yellow jacket" is a wasp. | | Yeah, a type of wasp, but not usually called that. Wasps by name usually | refers to solitary or small colonies built from mud or paper outdoors, not | the huge colonies of yellow jackets built inside enclosed locations. http://www.uky.edu/Agriculture/Entom...ruct/ef620.htm |
#9
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I've been told to never seal the entrances to a yellow jacket
nest around the house. You run the risk that they will chew their way out of the nest in the direction of your home's interior. I don't know if it is true, but it seems to make sense. |
#10
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Gideon wrote:
I've been told to never seal the entrances to a yellow jacket nest around the house. You run the risk that they will chew their way out of the nest in the direction of your home's interior. I don't know if it is true, but it seems to make sense. you are right. years ago my mother was in the hospital and i was taking care of her cat. saw a ton of wasps, or bees going in an area near a vent on the first floor. use some old sevin and chloradane in the opening. came back a day later and there was a ton of them dead and alive(a little) in the house. the cat was scared shi****s. years later the cat died of cancer. |
#11
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If it's a nest of Yellow Jackets inside your wall you will need to kill
them. I went through about 5 cans of that special Raid made just for wasps and hornets and three cans of fogger. But no go. Bite the bullet and get a pro to your house ASAP. It isn't that expensive and they know a hell of a lot more about this than we do. Our guy pumped a quick killing spray and then also applied a powdery substance which took care of any un-hatched bugs. If you seal them off or trap them, they WILL do whatever they can to get out. We found them coming through our recessed kitchen lighting two floors down each time I sprayed. Once the nest population is exterminated, good bye! Yellow Jackets do not re-use old nests. Good luck! "p4o2" wrote in message ups.com... I find 193 posts on wasps in this group but can not find an answer to " how long will a nest survive after all entrances exits have been sealed ? " I have calked all I can find at night so I think they are all inside. |
#12
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jdk wrote:
Gideon wrote: I've been told to never seal the entrances to a yellow jacket nest around the house. You run the risk that they will chew their way out of the nest in the direction of your home's interior. I don't know if it is true, but it seems to make sense. you are right. years ago my mother was in the hospital and i was taking care of her cat. saw a ton of wasps, or bees going in an area near a vent on the first floor. use some old sevin and chloradane in the opening. came back a day later and there was a ton of them dead and alive(a little) in the house. the cat was scared shi****s. years later the cat died of cancer. Second on the SEVIN dust. Tried to kill a (hidden) nest of wasps with several cans of poison to no success. I could see them going in & out every day, but did not find the nest. Took the advice of a guy I work with and dusted with SEVIN where I saw them going in, and they tracked the poison back to the nest. Never saw another wasp in that spot. |
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