I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but

/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #21  
I just found another hive in the ground and this one is really active. I will have to decide which method to use.... :unsure:
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #22  
Here is a video of a guy using Sevin at the entrance of the yellow jacket hive. I like the idea of using a puffer bottle to get it further into the hole though.

 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #23  
I had never seen what the nest looks like underground.
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #24  
I had never seen what the nest looks like fortunately underground.
I’ve seen what the nests look like inside a rotten log. Unfortunately, my work buddy was standing on the log when it broke open and was stung 21 times.
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #25  
I dug one up once, it looked like a highrise apt for yellow jackets...
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #26  
I just found another hive in the ground and this one is really active. I will have to decide which method to use.... :unsure:
The method I described is the most fun.
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #27  
Being the SOB that I am (and I suspect a lot of posters on here would agree with that), I like to take my gasoline push mower and park it over the nest hole and let it run so the blades 'puree' the little buggers.
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but
  • Thread Starter
#28  
Yes, well, I grew up around and used lots of pesticides that I know more about now, too.

The local parks use diatomaceous earth or talc because of the lack of off target environmental effects. They can open the trails to use in half an hour or so.

One of our horses came close to an anaphylactic shock reaction. It was a trail ride and my with and the horse were probably #25 or so. By the time they got to the yellow jacket hive in the ground, the yellow jackets were definitely PO. At the next vet check, she went to the vet and said "hey, I know that my horse passed the vet criteria, but I don't think that he's doing ok". She pulled him from the ride. We call it "ADR", "ain't doin' right", where you know the horse isn't right for himself, even though he looks ok otherwise. In another half hour he had welts everywhere, and the poor guy ended up on high dose IV antihistamines, and an IV bag of fluids for a couple of hours. The next day grooming him, I found and removed thirty two spots with yellow jackets still attached. Who knows how many more times he was bitten. He was fine in twelve hours or so, and a real trooper, but that experience put the fear of Yellowjackets in all three of us, and we learned to scoot down the trail at the first sign of one.

Stay safe out there,

All the best,

Peter
My first thought as I was reading this was how lucky you were that it was a planned hike with a vet nearby.
I had never seen what the nest looks like underground.
This nest was just a paper wasp nest laying in a concave spot in the ground.
Being the SOB that I am (and I suspect a lot of posters on here would agree with that), I like to take my gasoline push mower and park it over the nest hole and let it run so the blades 'puree' the little buggers.
I was hooking up my bush hog a few years ago and discovered there was a nest in the mowing area. As I said before, for some reason they don't go after me like they do others so I continued hooking up the mower, then got on the tractor and engaged the PTO shaft.
No more hornets.
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #29  
The method I described is the most fun.
I did the boring way on the new ground hive. I put a small amount of Sevin in a 8 oz plastic bottle and dusted the enterance. I just checked and there is no activity only a few hours later.
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #30  
I did the boring way on the new ground hive. I put a small amount of Sevin in a 8 oz plastic bottle and dusted the enterance. I just checked and there is no activity only a few hours later.
Sevin does work. I use it in the garden for squash bugs. And when my boys were young and showing 4H animals, we used to wear rubber gloves and masks and comb a bit of dust into bird feathers and animal fur before the shows to treat against mites and fleas. It worked well and the animals never showed any bad effects from the treatments. No doubt it works well for ground hives too, but not nearly as fun as my method (or 5030’s method).
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #31  
My first thought as I was reading this was how lucky you were that it was a planned hike with a vet nearby.

This nest was just a paper wasp nest laying in a concave spot in the ground.

I was hooking up my bush hog a few years ago and discovered there was a nest in the mowing area. As I said before, for some reason they don't go after me like they do others so I continued hooking up the mower, then got on the tractor and engaged the PTO shaft.
No more hornets.
It was an organized endurance ride, the Swanton Pacific, with teams of vets every 15-25 miles. It was a ride (75 & 100 miles) that used to be held north of Santa Cruz, going through a wide variety of ecosystems from near rain forest conditions in some redwood forest areas to a desert like section in one area. It is/was one of my all time favorite rides.

It also had a ride and tie event; two people, one horse. You ride the horse, tie it by the side of trail, and then your partner finds the horse, leap frogs you by some distance, and repeat. I knew one guy who probably ran 80 miles to his partner's 20, and another pair of runners who would come out every year to do it from the east coast with no training, (ok they swam some at home), and neither of them looked in shape to get to the far end of the field, much less the whole ride. "Don't judge a book by its cover". I think they were just amazing.

Some of the Jurassic film series scenes look like it was filmed there, or a similar ecosystem along the California coast (not the Kauai footage).

Not my footage;

The yellow jackets are endemic here, and were a definite trail hazard some years.

All the best,

Peter
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but
  • Thread Starter
#32  
^^^
Thank you. I enjoyed reading your post.
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #33  
You are welcome!
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #34  
I was hooking up my bush hog a few years ago and discovered there was a nest in the mowing area. As I said before, for some reason they don't go after me like they do others so I continued hooking up the mower, then got on the tractor and engaged the PTO shaft.
No more hornets.
Was planning on tilling the section of my garden where the peas were and discovered a wasp nest on my tiller underneath the cover I have over it. The cover is from an old BBQ grill and fits rather snugly. Took several days of lifting up one corner with a 10' pole and spraying to finally kill 'em all.

I'm lucky here, we don't seem to have a lot of yellowjackets, or if we do they're well away from anywhere I've been. Hope it stays that way... :ROFLMAO:
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but
  • Thread Starter
#35  
There was one year (1991) when it seemed like the white tail hornets in the woods were EVERYWHERE, and they're mean little buggers who will sting you for the sake of stinging you. On more than one occasion we would be running from one nest and kick up another. One Friday morning my cruise partner kicked up a nest first thing and got stung 7 times. We worked a few more hours, then he got nailed again and said- Well, never mind, but we called it a week.
Another coworker was out blazing a boundary line and spotted a hollow tree which had a hornets nest in it.. he got stung in the eye! :oops: They rushed him 100 miles to the hospital because nobody knew what would happen but luckily he recovered.
He was a school teacher who worked with us in the summers... heck of a nice guy but he had no business being in the woods. If he got out of sight of the truck he'd be lost.
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #36  
There was one year (1991) when it seemed like the white tail hornets in the woods were EVERYWHERE, and they're mean little buggers who will sting you for the sake of stinging you. On more than one occasion we would be running from one nest and kick up another. One Friday morning my cruise partner kicked up a nest first thing and got stung 7 times. We worked a few more hours, then he got nailed again and said- Well, never mind, but we called it a week.
Another coworker was out blazing a boundary line and spotted a hollow tree which had a hornets nest in it.. he got stung in the eye! :oops: They rushed him 100 miles to the hospital because nobody knew what would happen but luckily he recovered.
He was a school teacher who worked with us in the summers... heck of a nice guy but he had no business being in the woods. If he got out of sight of the truck he'd be lost.
One time, I was with a work partner doing stand exams. He was increment boring a tree and stepped on a downed rotten log at the butt of the tree. I saw the log break open and this mass of yellow jackets rose up from the log and started stinging us both. We took off running along the ridge and looking back, we could still see this flying mass following us and received a few more stings. After about a half mile, it started raining and the yellow jackets left. I had seven stings, and he had 23. We made it to the truck and I drove him to urgent care. Luckily he wasn’t allergic, so after he received an epinephrine injection and lots of ibuprofen, he was discharged. We decided that work was over for the day. I’m not allergic, so I just took a few Benadryl and ibuprofen. Those stings really hurt and the painful itching lasts awhile.
 
/ I know that it's gas, and gas is well, GAS, but #37  
I use a Weed Dragon. Propane torch at the end of a long shaft; runs off a 20lb tank. Supposed to be for weed eradication, but it does good work on ground nests.
 

Marketplace Items

72" ROCK BUCKET (A52706)
72" ROCK BUCKET...
2005 Wacker Neuson PDT3A Portable Diaphragm Pump (A59228)
2005 Wacker Neuson...
1994 SHOP MADE ENCLOSED TOOL TRAILER (A58216)
1994 SHOP MADE...
PowerBoss Admiral Plus 38C Ride-On Floor Scrubber/Sweeper (A59228)
PowerBoss Admiral...
Caterpillar D6K LGP (A53317)
Caterpillar D6K...
2019 BOBCAT E32I EXCAVATOR (A59823)
2019 BOBCAT E32I...
 
Top