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Wasps in log piles


IanW
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Hit a nest with a hedge trimmer a few years ago when the European wasps were killing farmers, they chased me over the field and stung the crap out of me. Got them back that night with two lynx cans and a blowtorch taped together, crackle and pop!

 

Now in Oz and wasps aren't any bother, but we do get snakes, black widows and tarantula looking monsters

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Hit a nest with a hedge trimmer a few years ago when the European wasps were killing farmers, they chased me over the field and stung the crap out of me. Got them back that night with two lynx cans and a blowtorch taped together, crackle and pop!

 

Now in Oz and wasps aren't any bother, but we do get snakes, black widows and tarantula looking monsters

 

Those European wasps are very unpleasant, they frighten the stuffing out of me & give me anaphalactic shock, ( however it's spelt).

Very often the nests are on the fringes of a trees crown, or up in a hedge.

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I lifted the sheet of my log pile the other day only to instantly uncover 4 queens trying to hibernate needless to say they all got sqaushed with a log I bet there are loads in my log pile. I have been stung a few times this year so far and absolutly hate the things I dont like the sound of those ones they say are making their way over to Britain from France they look nasty.

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Now that is interesting because i had a single wasp a day for a few days in my room with the wood basket. So maybe I too have dormant wasps in the log pile outside. No popular or willow, but mainly cypress, eucalyptus, and some old lilac.

 

I've come across two bees/wasp nests this year on jobs. One lot disturbed with a strimmer on an earth bank near rocks, which luckily were only small black bees and only a few of them. The other lot were very sensitive wasps near a old wall in bramble, so I left that area alone until the weather was much cooler.

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