Gardening
Related: About this forumbeac 2 , Yellow Jackets 0 -- It worked AGAIN!!
Some of you may remember my battle last summer to eliminate a ground nest of yellow jackets.
After many fruitless attempts and much frustration, I found a tip that called for pouring honey into the hole. The idea is that the sweet stuff attracts a nocturnal creature who then digs up the nest for you. And, lo and behold, it worked just as advertised!
Well, this year's Yellow Jackets made their nest right next to the picker fence surrounding the tree and mini-garden in my front yard. It made watering quite a challenge and it was impossible to add any nice annuals to the things already growing there.
So, first I marked the spot by dumping some diatomaceous earth into the hole (in the late evening, after the wasps had gone to bed.) This started the killing process by drying up the wasps who dug through the earth the next morning and made the hole really easy to see for the next step (diatomaceous earth is a bright white powder derived from fossilized microscopic algae [diatoms], for those unfamiliar.)
The next evening, I poured the better part of a 1lb jar of cheap honey into and around the hole. Just like last year, nothing happened the first night. But the morning after the second night, I went out to find this:
What had been a quarter-sized opening with yellow jackets swarming in and out was now a 5" hole surrounded by the debris left from the ransacking.
I have no idea if it was a raccoon or a skunk who did the deed and I really don't care. The wasps are gone and the method was 100% organic and safe for all other creatures and insects.
Hope this will help some others out there battling ground wasps!*
*please note that I only do this with nests that are in areas that must be mowed or in places otherwise likely to cause a person to accidentally disturb the nest. Yellow Jackets are beneficials in general, so any that nest in the wilder areas of the property won't be harmed.
NJCher
(38,228 posts)So you think the nocturnal creature wasn't harmed? I guess not if he stuck around to dig that size of a hole.
And you haven't noticed the yellowjackets returning?
I really have a problem with yellowjackets, as my property is on a mountainside with terraces. They like to get into the wood beams of the terraces. There is at least one around here now that we have to be careful of. Maybe two. I sent your tip to my spouse, who is in charge of wasp removal. Thanks for posting it.
Cher
beac
(9,992 posts)the "creature" wouldn't be harmed. I suppose if you've adapted to eat honey, you've also adapted to be immune, or at least indifferent, to stinging.
Another trick I recently heard it putting a clear cover, like a cake cover or a jar over the opening at night. In the morning, the wasps try to get out but don't dig a new opening b/c the clear cover gives them "hope" that they can fly out eventually. Has to be weighted down and relatively well sealed to the edges so they don't find a way out. My yard is too uneven for that, but it might work for a hole in a wooden terrace.
Curmudgeoness
(18,219 posts)why the diatomaceous earth prior to the honey? Isn't that overkill? Or is there a reason for using both?
Great idea though. I have had problems in the past, but just ignored it and watched when I was in the area of the hole, but it is good to have an easy solution if I need it. Thanks for posting.
beac
(9,992 posts)(I rigged up a measuring cup on a bamboo stake!) and it helped me to find the hole for the honey quickly in the dark the next night, minimizing the time I needed to stand near the opening to slowly pour it all in (I do the pouring in total darkness and the diatomaceous just after sundown.)
Speaking of overkill, last year I also poured in a few cups of Mosquito Barrier (a strong garlic repellant) when nothing happened the first night. I guess the "creature" wasn't put off by it b/c he dig up the nest anyway, but I decided to eliminate it this year and see if honey alone would do it.
You sound like me when I really get into a project too. I can't help myself, I want results, and I want them NOW.
Denninmi
(6,581 posts)I know I can get pick up a couple of gallons of honey at the store.
Anyone know where I can buy a 200 lb or so black bear in the Detroit area???
beac
(9,992 posts)Denninmi
(6,581 posts)I wonder if it would fit into a Priority Mail Flat Rate Large Box?
Probably not...alas.
beac
(9,992 posts)Ednahilda: "Um.. er...""
Package: "Rawrrrrrrr!"
roody
(10,849 posts)Isn't that an oxymoron?
beac
(9,992 posts)the generic grocery store stuff seems cheaper to me.
Though, you are right, honey is still pretty inexpensive for what you get no matter what.
HopeHoops
(47,675 posts)Nasty fuckers. They're aggressive as you get and over-winter in the siding. There's no environmentally friendly way to rid yourself of them. Keep in mind here that I'm a bee lover and our yard has more bees on any given day than the entire rest of the neighborhood combined - we don't poison the grass.
beac
(9,992 posts)I've been known to break out a short burst of un-eco wasp spray when I see their annual nest begin to form on our porch. Ugh.
HopeHoops
(47,675 posts)My first thought was, "YEAH! GREAT FUCKING IDEA!" He's a Republican.
beac
(9,992 posts)Some geniuses even suggest that after pouring you SET THE GASOLINE ON FIRE!
HopeHoops
(47,675 posts)beac
(9,992 posts)Problem solved!
NJCher
(38,228 posts)with laughter!
This one is less harmless than gasoline and the ending is very sobering:
A friend of mine told me about an Omaha woman who was watering with the hose/nozzle. She noticed a ground wasp's nest and, not really thinking this through too well, aimed the nozzle in the nest.
Very bad idea.
The tremendous number of bites put her in the hospital and there were complications. I think it was six months later that she died.
Cher
kurtzapril4
(1,353 posts)i usually do a non-environmentally friendly method. I can't stand them, they're not native, they're invasive and they're really aggressive.