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jeff December 13th 04 01:24 AM

Wasps coming in through chimney flue
 
I recently moved into a townhouse. I'm finding roughly 2 wasps per week
inside the house, and almost always they are found in the living room.
There is a fireplace in the living room, and I believe they are coming in
through the chimney flue of the fireplace. After suspecting this, I opened
the flue cover one time, to see if there was any activity there, and a wasp
came in. I think it's reasonable to assume this is where they are coming
from. There does not seem to be any other place that they would be likely
to come in through. I normally keep the cover to the flue closed, but there
are 2 small gaps in the cover they could fly in through.

I have not used the fireplace since I moved in. The flue to this fireplace
appears to be a metal duct. Would simply starting up a fire in the
fireplace be a good way to solve this problem? If starting a fire isn't the
solution, then what do you recommend?

Thanks,

J.



[email protected] December 13th 04 03:46 AM

On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 01:24:14 GMT, "jeff"
wrote:

I recently moved into a townhouse. I'm finding roughly 2 wasps per week
inside the house, and almost always they are found in the living room.
There is a fireplace in the living room, and I believe they are coming in
through the chimney flue of the fireplace. After suspecting this, I opened
the flue cover one time, to see if there was any activity there, and a wasp
came in. I think it's reasonable to assume this is where they are coming
from. There does not seem to be any other place that they would be likely
to come in through. I normally keep the cover to the flue closed, but there
are 2 small gaps in the cover they could fly in through.

I have not used the fireplace since I moved in. The flue to this fireplace
appears to be a metal duct. Would simply starting up a fire in the
fireplace be a good way to solve this problem? If starting a fire isn't the
solution, then what do you recommend?

Thanks,

J.


IMHO:

Now without ever looking at the situation personally and going on what
you said, I would guess one situation that could be happening. You
have a nest inside or very-very near your chimney. Since it is
possible the nest is in the chimney starting a fire could result in
smoke damage in your house. Plus if the nest is small enough not to
smoke you out, if it catches fire chimneys are to draft smoke not to
hold flames.

I would recommend if you find a good pest service to kill off the
creatures and a good chimney service to clean and inspect your
fireplace.

Good Luck with your adventures....

tom @ www.WorkAtHomePlans.com





TURTLE December 13th 04 04:11 AM


"jeff" wrote in message
news:2b6vd.1404$ag6.675@trndny07...
I recently moved into a townhouse. I'm finding roughly 2 wasps per week inside
the house, and almost always they are found in the living room. There is a
fireplace in the living room, and I believe they are coming in through the
chimney flue of the fireplace. After suspecting this, I opened the flue cover
one time, to see if there was any activity there, and a wasp came in. I think
it's reasonable to assume this is where they are coming from. There does not
seem to be any other place that they would be likely to come in through. I
normally keep the cover to the flue closed, but there are 2 small gaps in the
cover they could fly in through.

I have not used the fireplace since I moved in. The flue to this fireplace
appears to be a metal duct. Would simply starting up a fire in the fireplace
be a good way to solve this problem? If starting a fire isn't the solution,
then what do you recommend?

Thanks,

J.


This is Turtle.

Just build you a good fire in it and it should kill them all with the smoke it
makes. Now do be prepaired to deal with the wasps falling down into the fire or
making it to the room. Just watch out.

Now you could pull the cap on the roof and see down the pipe and tell where they
are and use wasps spray on them but don't have a fire at the same time. Had to
say it.

If this don't work Move out.

TURTLE



Lar December 13th 04 07:30 AM

On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 01:24:14 GMT, "jeff"
wrote:

:) I have not used the fireplace since I moved in. The flue to this fireplace
:) appears to be a metal duct. Would simply starting up a fire in the
:) fireplace be a good way to solve this problem? If starting a fire isn't the
:) solution, then what do you recommend?

They may not just be getting in through the fireplace. They will get
into the attic and find their way inside by way of any can (recessed)
lighting. The wasp treatments I do in the Fall is treating the attic
space for wasps already up there, treating possible entry points on
the outsode of the structure and recommending for the homeowner to use
the fireplace.


Lar. (to e-mail, get rid of the BUGS!!


Dancing dog is back!
http://media.ebaumsworld.com/smartdog.wmv


dadiOH December 13th 04 01:46 PM

jeff wrote:
I recently moved into a townhouse. I'm finding roughly 2 wasps per
week inside the house, and almost always they are found in the living
room. There is a fireplace in the living room, and I believe they are
coming in through the chimney flue of the fireplace. After
suspecting this, I opened the flue cover one time, to see if there
was any activity there, and a wasp came in. I think it's reasonable
to assume this is where they are coming from. There does not seem
to be any other place that they would be likely to come in through.
I normally keep the cover to the flue closed, but there are 2 small
gaps in the cover they could fly in through.

I have not used the fireplace since I moved in. The flue to this
fireplace appears to be a metal duct. Would simply starting up a
fire in the fireplace be a good way to solve this problem?


Oh, man, that would **** them off *GOOD*. Any that escaped - there are
bound to be survivors - would go crying and whining to their cousin
hornets and yellow jackets and the whole lot would be laying for you the
first time you poked your murdering nose out the door. :)

--
dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.05...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico



m Ransley December 13th 04 01:59 PM

Start a fire it will make them move


TURTLE December 13th 04 04:42 PM


"m Ransley" wrote in message
...
Start a fire it will make them move


This is Turtle.

Don't get simple here when we are tring to get complicated here.

TURTLE



TURTLE December 13th 04 04:51 PM


"dadiOH" wrote in message
...
jeff wrote:
I recently moved into a townhouse. I'm finding roughly 2 wasps per
week inside the house, and almost always they are found in the living
room. There is a fireplace in the living room, and I believe they are
coming in through the chimney flue of the fireplace. After
suspecting this, I opened the flue cover one time, to see if there
was any activity there, and a wasp came in. I think it's reasonable
to assume this is where they are coming from. There does not seem
to be any other place that they would be likely to come in through.
I normally keep the cover to the flue closed, but there are 2 small
gaps in the cover they could fly in through.

I have not used the fireplace since I moved in. The flue to this
fireplace appears to be a metal duct. Would simply starting up a
fire in the fireplace be a good way to solve this problem?


Oh, man, that would **** them off *GOOD*. Any that escaped - there are
bound to be survivors - would go crying and whining to their cousin
hornets and yellow jackets and the whole lot would be laying for you the
first time you poked your murdering nose out the door. :)

--
dadiOH


This is Turtle.

You could alway ask them to leave and be a kind and gentle person.

TURTLE



m Ransley December 13th 04 05:56 PM

Once I heard some noise in my chimney, so I looked in and saw a coon. I
started a newspaper fire and he crawled right up and out, I went back
in thinking he left, went out again and he was nowhere. Again I heard
noise in the chimney and the papers were still smoking, I looked up and
there he was so I lit a big fire with gasoline and wood, well he went up
but would not leave the chimney till I took my garden hose and got him
wet, those coons just dont like a garden hose but sure are stubborn
critters.


Bell December 13th 04 06:14 PM

m Ransley wrote:
Once I heard some noise in my chimney, so I looked in and saw a coon. I
started a newspaper fire and he crawled right up and out, I went back
in thinking he left, went out again and he was nowhere. Again I heard
noise in the chimney and the papers were still smoking, I looked up and
there he was so I lit a big fire with gasoline and wood, well he went
up but would not leave the chimney till I took my garden hose and got
him wet, those coons just dont like a garden hose but sure are stubborn
critters.



When was this? Back in the 60's, I guess?

Are you back into the LSD again?



[email protected] December 14th 04 04:25 AM

On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 11:56:51 -0600, (m Ransley)
wrote:

Once I heard some noise in my chimney, so I looked in and saw a coon. I
started a newspaper fire and he crawled right up and out, I went back
in thinking he left, went out again and he was nowhere. Again I heard
noise in the chimney and the papers were still smoking, I looked up and
there he was so I lit a big fire with gasoline and wood, well he went up
but would not leave the chimney till I took my garden hose and got him
wet, those coons just dont like a garden hose but sure are stubborn
critters.



They don't like the garden hose, but will tollerate being on fire?

Priorities are wrong.

:-P

later,

tom @
www.WorkAtHomePlans.com

[email protected] December 14th 04 04:26 AM

On Mon, 13 Dec 2004 10:51:44 -0600, "TURTLE"
wrote:


"dadiOH" wrote in message
...
jeff wrote:
I recently moved into a townhouse. I'm finding roughly 2 wasps per
week inside the house, and almost always they are found in the living
room. There is a fireplace in the living room, and I believe they are
coming in through the chimney flue of the fireplace. After
suspecting this, I opened the flue cover one time, to see if there
was any activity there, and a wasp came in. I think it's reasonable
to assume this is where they are coming from. There does not seem
to be any other place that they would be likely to come in through.
I normally keep the cover to the flue closed, but there are 2 small
gaps in the cover they could fly in through.

I have not used the fireplace since I moved in. The flue to this
fireplace appears to be a metal duct. Would simply starting up a
fire in the fireplace be a good way to solve this problem?


Oh, man, that would **** them off *GOOD*. Any that escaped - there are
bound to be survivors - would go crying and whining to their cousin
hornets and yellow jackets and the whole lot would be laying for you the
first time you poked your murdering nose out the door. :)

--
dadiOH


This is Turtle.

You could alway ask them to leave and be a kind and gentle person.

TURTLE


Better to send them a complaint letter.

;)

tom @ www.URLBee.com



Trish[_2_] June 13th 16 11:44 PM

Wasps coming in through chimney flue
 
replying to jeff, Trish wrote:
After my nephew removed a wasp nest from the top of the chimney, I spray
Spectricide wasp and hornet spray a couple of feet up on the inside of the
chimney from the living room. I have found one live one and one dead wasp
since I started doing that. If you have exotic birds, keep them away from the
spray, because if it highly toxic to them. Hope this helps.

--
posted from
http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...ue-575446-.htm



Sam Hill June 14th 16 12:07 AM

Wasps coming in through chimney flue
 
On Mon, 13 Jun 2016 22:44:01 +0000, Trish wrote:

replying to jeff, Trish wrote:
After my nephew removed a wasp nest from the top of the chimney, I spray
Spectricide ...


What is it with you "homeownershub" people? Can't read dates? Do you think
jeff is still waiting for a solution after *TWELVE YEARS?*

--
Sam

Uncle Monster[_2_] June 14th 16 02:41 AM

Wasps coming in through chimney flue
 
On Monday, June 13, 2016 at 5:44:05 PM UTC-5, Trish wrote:
replying to jeff, Trish wrote:
After my nephew removed a wasp nest from the top of the chimney, I spray
Spectricide wasp and hornet spray a couple of feet up on the inside of the
chimney from the living room. I have found one live one and one dead wasp
since I started doing that. If you have exotic birds, keep them away from the
spray, because if it highly toxic to them. Hope this helps.
--


Unfortunately, in 2005 Jeff was stung to death by a swarm of wasps. It was a real tragedy. He left behind 24 children and 600 gerbils. o_O

[8~{} Uncle Chimney Monster

Dick Hymen June 14th 16 09:58 AM

Wasps coming in through chimney flue
 
On 06/13/2016 05:07 PM, Sam Hill wrote:
On Mon, 13 Jun 2016 22:44:01 +0000, Trish wrote:

replying to jeff, Trish wrote:
After my nephew removed a wasp nest from the top of the chimney, I spray
Spectricide ...

What is it with you "homeownershub" people? Can't read dates?


They had to go back that far to find an article that was on-topic?

Or maybe they don't have anything to contribute to the political and gun control threads?

Iris November 5th 16 02:14 PM

Wasps coming in through chimney flue
 
replying to Trish, Iris wrote:
Thank you Trish I had so many wasps coming into my house every day. We can't
use our fireplace because of it. We keep a plexiglass cover over it now with
magnets around it to keep them out. Not too pretty I would like to use my
fireplace this winter!

--
for full context, visit http://www.homeownershub.com/mainten...ue-575446-.htm



stanmanwalk January 12th 17 12:44 PM

Wasps coming in through chimney flue
 
replying to Iris, stanmanwalk wrote:
Did plexiglass help and if so where did u get it from. ? What about any wasps
that still came down the flue, do they just die there? We've had a chimney
sweep but somehow they've managed to come back. Thought this really cold
spell we had would kill any nests close by, but first warm day two were in the
house.

--
for full context, visit https://www.homeownershub.com/mainte...ue-575446-.htm



Colonel Edmund J. Burke[_16_] January 12th 17 03:50 PM

Wasps coming in through chimney flue
 
On 6/13/2016 6:41 PM, Uncle Monster wrote:
On Monday, June 13, 2016 at 5:44:05 PM UTC-5, Trish wrote:
replying to jeff, Trish wrote:
After my nephew removed a wasp nest from the top of the chimney, I spray
Spectricide wasp and hornet spray a couple of feet up on the inside of the
chimney from the living room. I have found one live one and one dead wasp
since I started doing that. If you have exotic birds, keep them away from the
spray, because if it highly toxic to them. Hope this helps.
--


Unfortunately, in 2005 Jeff was stung to death by a swarm of wasps. It was a real tragedy. He left behind 24 children and 600 gerbils. o_O

[8~{} Uncle Chimney Monster


Uncle Monster knows all about them gerbils...
LOL



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