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Robert_Brenchley
Hectare
    
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« Reply #4 on: June 05, 2005, 21:03:55 » |
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I shared my shed with a wasps' nest last year and they never behaved the least bit threateningly; we just co-existed merrily. There was a second a few yards away where they were flying out across the path and they never bothered me either. I always leave them as they do so much good likking other insects. The only problems I've ever had were round beehives, as they'll kill the adult bees, rob the comb out, and sometimes kill a weak hive. I've found a way of stopping 95% of the problems though.
The only other thing was when there was a nest jst over the bathroom window one year. The nests collapse in late summer or early autumn, depending on the species, when the queens stop laying. The grubs are carnivorous; the adults feed them protein, and they produce a sugary secretion which the adults drink. Once there are no more grubs, the adults go looking for their sugar fix, and that's when they become a nuisance. So the girls got up and found the bathroom full of wasps one day. I was woken up; the elder of the two was hiding in her bedroom and wouldn't come out till the wasps were gone. By the time I'd got up, the little one had found some fly spray and was going mad with it, spraying everything that moved. The wasps were already almost dead.
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Yellow Petals
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« Reply #10 on: June 06, 2005, 09:16:36 » |
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It makes me shiver just to look at it. I imagine all those evil little beings buzzing around inside. Ugh!
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Allotments 4 All
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