[AT] OT-Ground bees

cgs oxygenfarm at gmail.com
Fri Aug 21 08:43:27 PDT 2020


If a solution of Dawn+water works, why not do it the safe way?
Burning flesh smells bad!

On 8/21/20 9:34 AM, Spencer Yost wrote:
> Yes, light it too.   I’ve never had luck with just gasoline and walking away. I always had to light it.
>
> Igniting it also helps  to minimize - at least in some small way - the ground contamination caused by the gasoline.
>
> Interesting side-note: my wife was side dressing some plants with dried manure when she got stung. Went out there at night, put in the gasoline and lit it.  Found out dried manure burns very well :-).    Fortunately not in a conflagration kind of way, just sort of a slow, strong, coal ember type burn.  I had my 5 gallon bucket of water with me though so all ended well and I suggest you bring a bucket too.   I’ve heard of mulch fires using this method in shrubbery/natural areas that have been mulched. So do be careful with mulch as well.
>
> Spencer
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
>> On Aug 21, 2020, at 7:47 AM, Mark Johnson <markjohnson100 at centurylink.net> wrote:
>>
>> I have been told that gasoline in the hornet nests works even better if you ignite it. :-)
>>
>> Of course, if it's near anything combustible, that's not an option.
>>
>> Mark J
>>
>>> On 8/20/2020 9:26 PM, drgerber at bright.net wrote:
>>> Might be unorthodox but I had ground hornets a few years ago; two holes in the ground from which they swarmed.  Nasty little things.  I tried seven dust per guidance from the local landscape guru; didn't work and I got stung.  Went out at dusk, and poured gasoline down the holes; killed them overnight.  Trick an old farmer friend told me about.
>>>
>>> Dave in Ohio
>>>
>>> -----Original Message-----
>>> From: AT <at-bounces at lists.antique-tractor.com> On Behalf Of Mike M
>>> Sent: Thursday, August 20, 2020 9:55 PM
>>> To: Antique tractor email discussion group <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
>>> Subject: [AT] OT-Ground bees
>>>
>>> Hi all, a little slow here lately so I was wondering if any of you have a sure fire way to rid yourself of ground bees, yellow jackets. We're having a dry summer and that seems to have made them explode. A friendly neighborhood skunk or opossum cleared out 3 for me, but I am battling 2 more without much success. One is along the driveway a long ways from the house, so all options are on the table for that one. I discovered it after my wife  had trimmed an elm branch and was getting ready to drag it away. I saw them swarming, but she didn't notice. I told her back back up slowly but steadily and hop back into the truck. The other one is under a  Boxwood shrub right next to the garage, I've sprayed it with poison (Bifenthrin) but they won't die. Any tips or advise would be appreciated.
>>>
>>> Thanks,
>>> Mike M
>>>
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-- 
Charlie

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