Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK?

   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK? #1  

DennisArrow

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Location
Sugar Valley, Ga
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Iseki TL 2300, Kubota RTV, Kubota B7610
Carpenter Bee Solutions - The Best Carpenter Bee Trap & Other Carpenter Bee Control Products

This outfit got some coverage last year; but I discovered it late in the Carpenter Bee season. A couple of days ago found a bee buzzing around the back deck and gazebo and then yesterday one on the front porch floor having fallen from the cornice overhang..........

So......it's the season again...........

In the past, I have the exterminator spray the outside of the house every month, got heavy duty aerosols from box stores, mix my own stuff from the feed store and running around swatting.....................

I STILL HAVE THE DURN THINGS in my fascias and overhangs.............

Does the above stuff actually work and does it ELIMINATE the problem?

God bless..........Dennis
 
   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK? #2  
The best thing that worked for me was paying the grandkids $1 for every one they swatted down with a tennis racket. Best $20 I ever spent and kept the grandkids busy for a few hours.
 
   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK? #3  
I haven't used that product. the only thing I have found that works is a multipurpose dust that is labeled for use against carpenter bees. It was in a bright yellow container. I can't find it in the garage right now to tell you what is in it, but it was the only product on the shelf that said it could be used on carpenter bees. It works, but you have to use something to get it in the holes they drill in your wood. Wish they made a liquid product that I could spray.
 
   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK? #4  
Carpenter Bee Solutions - The Best Carpenter Bee Trap & Other Carpenter Bee Control Products

This outfit got some coverage last year; but I discovered it late in the Carpenter Bee season. A couple of days ago found a bee buzzing around the back deck and gazebo and then yesterday one on the front porch floor having fallen from the cornice overhang..........

So......it's the season again...........

In the past, I have the exterminator spray the outside of the house every month, got heavy duty aerosols from box stores, mix my own stuff from the feed store and running around swatting.....................

I STILL HAVE THE DURN THINGS in my fascias and overhangs.............

Does the above stuff actually work and does it ELIMINATE the problem?

God bless..........Dennis

I have had great success with either poking them with a wire after they go in the hole or filling up the hole with liquid nails once they go in the hole. Ken Sweet
 
   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK? #5  
Here's a guaranteed solution:
Tools needed - contact poison powder (use carpenter ant dust in a squeeze container with a straw)
chalk for marking the dusted holes
3/8 flush wood plugs (sold in 25 packs at a hardware store)
wood glue
soft head mallet

Dust the holes and then mark them with the chalk. Wait a day or two as they may not be home right now. Then use the wood plugs and glue to fill the holes. It's convenient that their holes are exactly 3/8 inch.

One year when they were especially bad, I dusted 14 holes. Within minutes they were falling out of the holes and my size 8D shoes completed their demise. I got eleven of them this way. I guess the other three weren't home just then.
 
   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK? #6  
I've been wondering about them too as I'm in a log house and they come flocking around with their knife/forks ready...

Here is an outlandish idea that strikes me as very simple...but probably too expensive.

Note: I've no idea if this would work...

Have you ever played with dry ice and watched it sublimate into a cloud and then taken a breath of that cloud? Since it's Co2, it will yank your breath away from you.

Now, think of an attachment to the perimeter of your house, much like your guttering.

Have a contraption that you can feed dry ice into that will then, let this vapor cloud of C02 descend down the sides of your house. Much like a curtain if you will.

I'm wondering if that could help prevent them from going to your house as they will have their breath taken away from them.

Natural substances are being used so you are not applying stains/other to your house, you are not chasing them with poison, you are not smashing them... you are suffocating them should they choose to fly into the vapor cloud of death!

My experience is they do not munch on your house in the evening hours so you would need this curtain of Co2 for roughly a month and at that, only 75% or so of each day.

I've got NO idea how one would create this and I have no idea if it would even work.

It was just something that popped into my head just the other day while I was getting ready for work.

Thoughts?
 
   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK? #7  
I've been wondering about them too as I'm in a log house and they come flocking around with their knife/forks ready...

Here is an outlandish idea that strikes me as very simple...but probably too expensive.

Note: I've no idea if this would work...

Have you ever played with dry ice and watched it sublimate into a cloud and then taken a breath of that cloud? Since it's Co2, it will yank your breath away from you.

Now, think of an attachment to the perimeter of your house, much like your guttering.

Have a contraption that you can feed dry ice into that will then, let this vapor cloud of C02 descend down the sides of your house. Much like a curtain if you will.

I'm wondering if that could help prevent them from going to your house as they will have their breath taken away from them.

Natural substances are being used so you are not applying stains/other to your house, you are not chasing them with poison, you are not smashing them... you are suffocating them should they choose to fly into the vapor cloud of death!

My experience is they do not munch on your house in the evening hours so you would need this curtain of Co2 for roughly a month and at that, only 75% or so of each day.

I've got NO idea how one would create this and I have no idea if it would even work.

It was just something that popped into my head just the other day while I was getting ready for work.

Thoughts?

Seems awfully expensive, plus you would need to get onto the roof every day to fill this contraption. I think dusting the holes with sevin dust or liquid sevin when you find them, wait several days cut you some plugs out of a dowel hammer them in with glue cut flush and then put a protectant over would just prove more effective. Skip the last step if you dont care about the holes.
 
   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK?
  • Thread Starter
#8  
I ordered the traps, 4 of them and the "butter" that he sells. We shall see. My main concern is up in the cornice of my "A" frame which is open timber frame construction and up there at least 3 stories high........HARD to get up there; but I plan on hanging a trap in the peak and one at each corner of the house. Will use another back on the gazebo where I tend to get a few.

In the past have used sevin dust, spray, on and on in the holes but have never plugged them. While I have the ladder rigged to get up high and hang the trap am going to use the "butter" stuff which doesnt dry up as spray does........Yes, I need to try plugging the holes after applying poison, and if the "butter" stuff doesnt work on old holes I WILL PLUG them up as my next treatment...............

We shall see........Dennis
 
   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK? #9  
Termidor SC! Although it isn't specifically for carpenter bees, it works pretty good. I spray some up in the holes and it kills any that are home. It lasts a long time so any that come along afterward die also. I sprayed all the holes an old open shop building that was on my property last year. For weeks afterward, you couldn't walk through without walking over the crunching corpses of the dead carpenter bees. Must have killed 3 or 4 dozen! This stuff is expensive, but it works on ants, carpenter ants, termites and carpenter bees.
 
   / Carpenter Bee Solutions THAT WORK? #10  
Seems awfully expensive, plus you would need to get onto the roof every day to fill this contraption.

Oh, I agree it would probably be expensive... I had zero intent of climbing to the roof... this is being fed from a ground based hopper with feed lines going to all corners of the house :D
 

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