Pesky wasps nest.......Help!!

Pesky wasps nest.......Help!!

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Wacky Racer

Original Poster:

39,786 posts

262 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
OK,

Last night I discovered a fully formed wasps nest similar to this:-



In the soffit of my summer house (shed), so I decided to wait until it went dark around 10 and smashed it to bits with our clothes pole extension, however I forgot I was wearing shorts and got stung a couple of times on the bcensoreds for my trouble.....grumpy

All was well (I thought), until this morning I noticed the little blighters had started making another one in the same place......

So:- I thought I would coat the affected area with Petrol/bleach/Engine oil etc, to hopefully discourage them...I don't want to call council pest control in 'cos they charge around sixty quid.

Any suggestions, apart from nuking them from orbit and kicking their back doors in......

A very sore WR........biggrin

davido140

9,614 posts

241 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
tub of wasp powder from B&Q, it'll cost you a fiver and kills the buggers dead very quickly.

10 Pence Short

32,880 posts

232 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
I was helping a friend of mine on a roofing job a couple of months ago. Once we got the slates off there was a huge old nest under there, luckily it was too early for them to be out and about. I didn't fancy being on a roof trying to avoid thousands of p*ssed off wasps.


HRG

72,863 posts

254 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
I attacked the one in my shed last year with insect spray. Sure, they were a bit pissed off for a while but I got the entire colony in the end smash

As you mentioned, it's best to go in heavily armed and late in the day as the little buggers get dozy biggrin

sleep envy

62,260 posts

264 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
smoke them first to pacify them, then burn the fkers

HRG

72,863 posts

254 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
Ricc, we had this last year... Sheds = wood != conducive to fire.

sleep envy

62,260 posts

264 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
I said burn the nest, not the entire shed!!

a gas burner will be fine, worked for me

HRG

72,863 posts

254 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
Your shed is probably tidier than mine wink

bungle.

54 posts

203 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
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smile

rhinochopig

17,932 posts

213 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
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Tell your wife she needs to suck the poison out now. Tell her if she doesn't you'll die a painful lingering death.

MarkwG

5,581 posts

204 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
I've used a foam spray before, works really well, does the pacify & kill bit: scares the !£$" out of you, when you apply it, as the whole thing seems to boil as if they're coming at you. Then you need to find out how they're getting in, or they'll be back!

Edited by MarkwG on Tuesday 2nd June 12:48

Wacky Racer

Original Poster:

39,786 posts

262 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
rhinochopig said:
Tell your wife she needs to suck the poison out now. Tell her if she doesn't you'll die a painful lingering death.
scratchchin

idea

Wacky Racer

Original Poster:

39,786 posts

262 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
MarkwG said:
I've used a foam spray before, works really well, does the pacify & kill bit: scares the !£$" out of you, when you apply it, as the whole thing seems to boil as if they're coming at you. The you need to find out how they're getting in, or they'll be back!
Thats no problem, this is on the outside, underneath the overhang on the apex...

The problem is not getting rid of them per se, it's coating the wood with something that they think stinks so they will move on elsewhere...smile

sleep envy

62,260 posts

264 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
apply some grease to the eaves

FTJoe

237 posts

197 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
Try to encourage a bear of some sort, or perhaps a honey badger or wolverine, into your garden and they should do a good job of destroying the nest.

Then once it's been knocked down and the wasps are busy trying to fend off the bear attack sneak in and remove the shed with large crane and place it in a different corner of your garden. Wasps are stupid, and believe in magic, and so will think it's simply vanished and will leave.

Then all that's left is to work out how to get rid of the bear.

stifler

37,069 posts

203 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
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Wacky, can't you get Heskey to do it for you? hehe

Wacky Racer

Original Poster:

39,786 posts

262 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
stifler said:
Wacky, can't you get Heskey to do it for you? hehe
Not likely...he was laughing his head off when I got stung last night...rage

Eddh

4,656 posts

207 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
stifler said:
Wacky, can't you get Heskey to do it for you? hehe
I was going to suggest sending Heskey in!

stifler

37,069 posts

203 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
Wacky Racer said:
stifler said:
Wacky, can't you get Heskey to do it for you? hehe
Not likely...he was laughing his head off when I got stung last night...rage
Secretarys humour eh?

If you were to have worn his tights they wouldn't have been able to sting your bottom half. Ask him in a public place if you can borrow them. biggrin

WorAl

10,877 posts

203 months

Tuesday 2nd June 2009
quotequote all
hit it with this

Stand back and be a man, they're only small.

On a serious Note....you have to kill the queen. Which you clearly didnt do when hitting it with a clothes prop you girl.


Edited by WorAl on Tuesday 2nd June 12:14