Wasps’ Nests Destroyed In Chorley
Wasps’ Nests Destroyed In Chorley
Wasps’ Nests Destroyed In Chorley – Chorley Pest Control destroy wasps’ nests throughout the area for a fixed fee of £29.50. The fee is fixed for 2009 and we do not charge extra for weekends, evenings or bank holidays.
The annoying wasp season is almost upon us once more, what would summer be without our friends the wasps to pester us as we enjoy our evening barbeques?
The biology of the wasp means they are rarely seen much sooner than July as until then only the queen wasp is in the nest.
In late March or early April the over-wintering queens leave their hibernating sites to seek nesting sites which could be in a hole in the ground, a bush or artificial structures such as air-bricks eaves, lofts and attics, garden sheds etc.
The new queen starts to build her nest with a papery material that she makes by chewing small pieces of wood mixed with saliva; this is known as Wasp paper.
She will raise the first few workers by her own efforts and those workers will then continue the construction of the nest and caring for the immature Wasps to follow.
Nest construction starts in earnest in June and will reach its maximum in size in September, when 5 – 30,000 workers may be in the nest. These workers will forage for food up to 400 metres from the nest. The size of wasp colonies will vary from year to year, the severity of the previous winter is probably the key factor.
In the Autumn the newly produced queens mate and leave the nest to find hibernation sites, the rest of the nest dies out and the nest is never used again.
Individuals react differently to being stung by wasps; some are hardly affected, while others suffer considerable pain and swelling and a few become seriously allergic to being stung, which in severe cases results in sudden death due to anaphylactic shock.
Control
It is adviseable to let a professional Pest Control Officer deal with a Wasps’ nest for the reasons mentioned above. An insecticide will be injected into the entrance to the nest. Returning wasps will carry the insecticide into the centre of the nest and within a short time all wasps should be dead.
It is foolish to allow a wasps’ nest to remain untreated as the immature queens produced by the nest will invariably nest nearby in the following spring resulting in many more nests the following year. For this reason several nests are often found close together in a neighbourhood a locality.
Wasps’ Nests Destroyed In Chorley
How To Destroy Wasp Nests
How To Destroy Wasp Nests (Ken Chadwick)
How To Destroy Wasp Nests – Although 11 species of true wasp are found in Europe, only two, the Common Wasp (Vespula vulgaris) and the German Wasp (Vespula germanica) are important as pest species in the U.K. although in recent years the European Wasp (Dolichovespula media) has made inroads into Britain after arriving on the South Coast in the early 1980s.
All three species over-winter as queens. The Common Wasp usually hibernates in buildings and the German Wasp typically over-wintering under the bark of trees.
In spring the queens leave their hibernating quarters to seek nesting sites which could be in a hole in the ground, a hollow tree or artificial structures such as eaves, lofts and attics, garden sheds etc.
The queen starts to build her nest with a papery material that she makes by chewing small pieces of wood mixed with saliva; this is known as ‘wasp paper’.
She will raise the first few workers by her own efforts and those workers will then commence the enlargement of the nest and caring for the immature wasps to follow.
Nest construction starts in earnest in June and will reach its maximum in size in September when 5 – 30,000 workers may be present. These workers will forage for food up to 400 metres from the nest.
The size of wasp colonies will vary from year to year, the severity of the previous winter is probably the key factor in determining wasp numbers.
In summer as nest building continues apace the wasp is a gardener’s friend as it enjoys a high protein diet of aphids, grubs and larvae but as summer turns to autumn the wasp turns to feeding on fermenting fruits, in short – alcohol!
It is now as the days shorten that the wasp becomes troublesome and pest controllers across the country are deluged with call-outs.
In the late autumn the nest starts to produce the new queens to continue the cycle into the following year and when the time is ripe the young queens leave the nest and mate before hibernating. The rest of the colony dies and the nest is never used again.
Individuals react differently to being stung by wasps; some are hardly affected, others suffer considerable pain and swelling and a few become seriously allergic which in a very cases each year results in sudden death due to anaphylactic shock.
It is always advisable to let a professional deal with a wasps’ nest. An insecticide will be used to cover the entrance to the nest. Returning wasps will carry the insecticide into the heart of the nest and within a few hours all wasps will be dead.
It is inadvisable to allow a wasps’ nest to remain untreated as the resultant queens produced by the nest will invariably nest nearby in the following spring resulting in many more nests the following year. For this reason several nests are often clustered together in a locality.
Ken Chadwick B.A. (Hons) is a Pest Controller and author on pest control issues. For further information please visit http://www.waspgo.co.uk
That concludes this article entitled – How To Kill Wasp Nests
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