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#1
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The church has some wasps that burrow in, and are not at all
affected by wasp sprays. The maint guys have been using some kind of powder. Which could be used on homes, possibly during repair. Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. |
#2
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On Thu, 22 Apr 2010 21:47:25 -0400, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: The church has some wasps that burrow in, and are not at all affected by wasp sprays. The maint guys have been using some kind of powder. Which could be used on homes, possibly during repair. Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. Sevin dust will kill wasps. |
#3
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![]() "Stormin Mormon" wrote in message ... The church has some wasps that burrow in, and are not at all affected by wasp sprays. The maint guys have been using some kind of powder. Which could be used on homes, possibly during repair. Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. Probably sevin dust. |
#4
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Stormin Mormon wrote:
The church has some wasps that burrow in, and are not at all affected by wasp sprays. The maint guys have been using some kind of powder. Which could be used on homes, possibly during repair. Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. I use 50% Methoxychlor just because I have some, but Sevin does a good job too it just takes a little longer. Use 10% Sevin instead of the 5% unless you already have 5%. Just put a pinch of it in the hole where they are getting in. Sevin will stain carpets and rugs, so be careful where it might get inside. Bob |
#5
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In article ,
"Stormin Mormon" wrote: The church has some wasps that burrow in, and are not at all affected by wasp sprays. The maint guys have been using some kind of powder. Which could be used on homes, possibly during repair. Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. It's probably decomposed shroud of turin. Not likely to work on mormon wasps. |
#6
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On Apr 22, 8:47*pm, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: The church has some wasps that burrow in, and are not at all affected by wasp sprays. The maint guys have been using some kind of powder. Which could be used on homes, possibly during repair. Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus *www.lds.org . Wasps eat bugs that that bother you and your garden, they are helpfull carnivores, they are really only pests in fall when they need to store energy for winter, or that late summer cookout, but as others said its Ortho Sevin, a turkey baister with a hose on it is what pros use to get it in tough spots, its even sold as a liqued spray with garden hose bottle but I think it works mainly when dryed. I used to tape a cup on a long wood pole and pour the powder into the wasp ground hole. It might kill fish also so be carefull of runoff. One small bag of Seven might do 5-10 nests |
#7
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Thanks. I'll ask for that.
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Oren" wrote in message ... On Thu, 22 Apr 2010 21:47:25 -0400, "Stormin Mormon" wrote: The church has some wasps that burrow in, and are not at all affected by wasp sprays. The maint guys have been using some kind of powder. Which could be used on homes, possibly during repair. Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. Sevin dust will kill wasps. |
#8
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Made and seconded, do we have a floor vote on Sevin?
Could be. Thanks. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Ralph Mowery" wrote in message ... Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. Probably sevin dust. |
#9
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That sounds like real world advice. These applications will
be outdoors, on exterior walls. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "zxcvbob" wrote in message ... I use 50% Methoxychlor just because I have some, but Sevin does a good job too it just takes a little longer. Use 10% Sevin instead of the 5% unless you already have 5%. Just put a pinch of it in the hole where they are getting in. Sevin will stain carpets and rugs, so be careful where it might get inside. Bob |
#10
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Maybe instead, I'll file some metal off the gold plates, and
blow that in? -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Smitty Two" wrote in message news ![]() Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. It's probably decomposed shroud of turin. Not likely to work on mormon wasps. |
#11
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Now, that's practical advice. With some how-to application.
Thanks. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "ransley" wrote in message ... Wasps eat bugs that that bother you and your garden, they are helpfull carnivores, they are really only pests in fall when they need to store energy for winter, or that late summer cookout, but as others said its Ortho Sevin, a turkey baister with a hose on it is what pros use to get it in tough spots, its even sold as a liqued spray with garden hose bottle but I think it works mainly when dryed. I used to tape a cup on a long wood pole and pour the powder into the wasp ground hole. It might kill fish also so be carefull of runoff. One small bag of Seven might do 5-10 nests |
#12
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Stormin Mormon wrote:
The church has some wasps that burrow in, and are not at all affected by wasp sprays. The maint guys have been using some kind of powder. Which could be used on homes, possibly during repair. Anyone know what this powder might be? Now, I will DAGS and see what I find. Another religious war? Those White Anglo Saxon Protestants are very pesky aren't they? *snicker* TDD |
#13
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#14
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We're doing our part to rid the world of infidel.
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "The Daring Dufas" wrote in message ... Another religious war? Those White Anglo Saxon Protestants are very pesky aren't they? *snicker* TDD |
#15
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One of their nests was burrowed into the wall, outside the
primary room. Somehow, a couple of them got into the primary room, and one of the boys was stung last year. I do take that seriously. The nest was under the side wood, they enter and exit through a hole about 3/8 inch diameter. I tried three or four brand of wasp spray. Even sprayed the critters directly. Got em wet. They don't seem to notice. The facilities management people say some kind of powder blown into the nest holes seems to help. Last year they got 30 complaints about wasps, from 10 buildings. That's a real issue. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Tegger" wrote in message ... And then they stick around and do the bothering themselves instead. They are terribly annoying when sitting on the deck, especially with sweet food or beverages around, and frighten the kids out of their wits. To heck with them (the wasps I mean, not the kids). they are helpfull carnivores, they are really only pests in fall when they need to store energy for winter, or that late summer cookout, Around here they're pests ALL the time. but as others said its Ortho Sevin, a turkey baister with a hose on it is what pros use to get it in tough spots, its even sold as a liqued spray with garden hose bottle but I think it works mainly when dryed. I used to tape a cup on a long wood pole and pour the powder into the wasp ground hole. It might kill fish also so be carefull of runoff. One small bag of Seven might do 5-10 nests With our perpetual wasp problem, I'm going to give this Sevin stuff a try. Never heard of it before. -- Tegger |
#16
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On 2010-04-23, Stormin Mormon wrote:
directly. Got em wet. They don't seem to notice. Strange. We got lotsa wasps, all different shapes and sizes, and Black Flag and Ace Hardware wasp spray takes 'em out, no problem. These sprays shoot a healthy straight stream that puts the shooter as far as 10 ft back. nb |
#17
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On 2010-04-23, Tegger wrote:
are terribly annoying when sitting on the deck, especially with sweet food or beverages around..... A lot depends on the type of wasp. We went camping once and were plagued by swarms of ground burrowing yellow jackets. Damn things would be 3 deep on your food before you could get a fork full to your mouth. We beat them at their own game. We put a paper plate full of fresh fruit salad about 40 ft away. Cleared our area completely. They really go for melons like honeydew. nb |
#18
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Stormin Mormon wrote:
One of their nests was burrowed into the wall, outside the primary room. Somehow, a couple of them got into the primary room, and one of the boys was stung last year. I do take that seriously. The nest was under the side wood, they enter and exit through a hole about 3/8 inch diameter. I tried three or four brand of wasp spray. Even sprayed the critters directly. Got em wet. They don't seem to notice. The facilities management people say some kind of powder blown into the nest holes seems to help. Last year they got 30 complaints about wasps, from 10 buildings. That's a real issue. Sevin is a kind of slow acting powder. That's what you want. (if you buy the wettable powder formulation, you're still going to use it dry.) It just takes a little; you put it where you know some of them will walk thru it. It gets on their feet, doesn't immediately kill them, and they take it back to the nest and walk around getting it all over the paper hive. In a couple of days, it kills all of them. A fast acting poison, like pyrethrum or most wast sprays, knocks them down right away and they don't get a chance to goto the hive and poison all their wasp buddies. Bob |
#19
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On 2010-04-23, zxcvbob wrote:
them. A fast acting poison, like pyrethrum or most wast sprays, knocks them down right away and they don't get a chance to goto the hive and poison all their wasp buddies. We have a modular home (park model, etc) with that interupted siding with kind of concave lines running horizontally. When these meet things like vert window trim, it's an open door to wast to get into the walls. I've seen them enter at a couple points and just aimed a 3-4 sec stream of wasp spray into that entry point. No more activity. We have some pretty healthy wasps, too. One is at least twice as big as every other wasp around here and is kinda furry and colored like a Gurnsey cow. As big as they are, the stream-type wasp sprays take them out, too, even if a bit slower (5-10 secs). Any suggestions on what to use to plug those entry points? nb |
#20
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notbob wrote in news:friAn.44407$Db6.21929
@newsfe05.iad: On 2010-04-23, zxcvbob wrote: them. A fast acting poison, like pyrethrum or most wast sprays, knocks them down right away and they don't get a chance to goto the hive and poison all their wasp buddies. We have a modular home (park model, etc) with that interupted siding with kind of concave lines running horizontally. When these meet things like vert window trim, it's an open door to wast to get into the walls. I've seen them enter at a couple points and just aimed a 3-4 sec stream of wasp spray into that entry point. No more activity. We have some pretty healthy wasps, too. One is at least twice as big as every other wasp around here and is kinda furry and colored like a Gurnsey cow. As big as they are, the stream-type wasp sprays take them out, too, even if a bit slower (5-10 secs). Any suggestions on what to use to plug those entry points? Just silicone caulk. The problem is the sheer number of places wasps will nest, which is pretty much ANYwhere they can build a nest, no matter how small the cavity. Wasps will use an entry point as small as 1/4 x 1/4. If I went around my house and tried to plug every possible place, I'd have to encase the entire house in shrink-wrap, the way they do pleasure boats. And even then the *******s would find a way in. Don't forget the soffit. It's filled with holes for ventilation. Gonna plug all of those? Last summer we didn't put our deck umbrella up for couple of weeks. When I finally did, there was a nest in there about the size of a large cherry- tomato. After I got rid of it, wasps came by for several days in a row looking for that nest. We had a fairly mild winter this year. This means more queens will have survived. The experts are predicting a waspalanche for us this year... -- Tegger |
#21
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notbob wrote in
: On 2010-04-23, Tegger wrote: are terribly annoying when sitting on the deck, especially with sweet food or beverages around..... A lot depends on the type of wasp. We went camping once and were plagued by swarms of ground burrowing yellow jackets. Damn things would be 3 deep on your food before you could get a fork full to your mouth. We beat them at their own game. We put a paper plate full of fresh fruit salad about 40 ft away. Cleared our area completely. They really go for melons like honeydew. Ah, a simple diversion. Cute. Never thought of that one. -- Tegger |
#22
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On 2010-04-23, Tegger wrote:
We had a fairly mild winter this year. This means more queens will have survived. The experts are predicting a waspalanche for us this year... If Winter temps are a factor, we may get a respite, it being almost the coldest Winter on record, here. Even our sewers froze. ![]() nb |
#23
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I hear you, about the corrugated siding.
Silicone caulk works, for me. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "notbob" wrote in message ... We have a modular home (park model, etc) with that interupted siding with kind of concave lines running horizontally. When these meet things like vert window trim, it's an open door to wast to get into the walls. I've seen them enter at a couple points and just aimed a 3-4 sec stream of wasp spray into that entry point. No more activity. We have some pretty healthy wasps, too. One is at least twice as big as every other wasp around here and is kinda furry and colored like a Gurnsey cow. As big as they are, the stream-type wasp sprays take them out, too, even if a bit slower (5-10 secs). Any suggestions on what to use to plug those entry points? nb |
#24
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You're right about the small holes. I've seen with my own
eyes, wasps crawl up a glass window, and then over the top (crank out, two section trailer windows). They seem to like to nest in my outdoor propane grill, and in the metal tube structure of the grill base. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Tegger" wrote in message ... The problem is the sheer number of places wasps will nest, which is pretty much ANYwhere they can build a nest, no matter how small the cavity. Wasps will use an entry point as small as 1/4 x 1/4. If I went around my house and tried to plug every possible place, I'd have to encase the entire house in shrink-wrap, the way they do pleasure boats. And even then the *******s would find a way in. Don't forget the soffit. It's filled with holes for ventilation. Gonna plug all of those? Last summer we didn't put our deck umbrella up for couple of weeks. When I finally did, there was a nest in there about the size of a large cherry- tomato. After I got rid of it, wasps came by for several days in a row looking for that nest. We had a fairly mild winter this year. This means more queens will have survived. The experts are predicting a waspalanche for us this year... -- Tegger |
#25
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At church, the only thing had problems was a 8 or 9 year old
boy who got stung. But, we can't be leaving them in the parking lot. The melon diversion sounds like a good picnic idea. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Tegger" wrote in message ... A lot depends on the type of wasp. We went camping once and were plagued by swarms of ground burrowing yellow jackets. Damn things would be 3 deep on your food before you could get a fork full to your mouth. We beat them at their own game. We put a paper plate full of fresh fruit salad about 40 ft away. Cleared our area completely. They really go for melons like honeydew. Ah, a simple diversion. Cute. Never thought of that one. -- Tegger |
#26
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On Apr 23, 8:57*am, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: One of their nests was burrowed into the wall, outside the primary room. Somehow, a couple of them got into the primary room, and one of the boys was stung last year. I do take that seriously. The nest was under the side wood, they enter and exit through a hole about 3/8 inch diameter. I tried three or four brand of wasp spray. Even sprayed the critters directly. Got em wet. They don't seem to notice. The facilities management people say some kind of powder blown into the nest holes seems to help. Last year they got 30 complaints about wasps, from 10 buildings. That's a real issue. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus *www.lds.org . "Tegger" wrote in message ... And then they stick around and do the bothering themselves instead. They are terribly annoying when sitting on the deck, especially with sweet food or beverages around, and frighten the kids out of their wits. To heck with them (the wasps I mean, not the kids). they are helpfull carnivores, they are really only pests in fall when they need to store energy for winter, or that late summer cookout, Around here they're pests ALL the time. but as others said its Ortho Sevin, a turkey baister with a hose on it is what pros use to get it in tough spots, its even sold as a liqued spray with garden hose bottle but I think it works mainly when dryed. I used to tape a cup on a long wood pole and pour *the powder into the wasp ground hole. It might kill fish also so be carefull of runoff. One small bag of Seven might do 5-10 nests With our perpetual wasp problem, I'm going to give this Sevin stuff a try. Never heard of it before. -- Tegger Any crack in floor mouldings and electric outlets or ceiling fixtures can let them in, and so it can happen when you do the Seven, be sure its not honey bees |
#27
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