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Thread: Kelly Kettle wasp house

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2005
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    Angry Kelly Kettle wasp house

    Not really a bushcraft thread, but I went down the shed to pick up my kelly kettle for a hunting trip only to discover wasps had taken residence inside it

    I was wondering has anyone had any similar experiences.
    and should I leave them to the end of summer or nuke them now


    Ian

  2. #2

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    So where do you store your kit then?

  3. #3

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    Leave them until the end of summer.
    Don't sweat the small stuff

    Martin

  4. #4

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    Personally I'd have to get rid of em - but tread careful - I once held a ladder for a mate of mine who sprayed stuff in a wasps nest - never seen a man come down a ladder so fast as when they boiled out!

  5. #5

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    Quote Originally Posted by British Red
    Personally I'd have to get rid of em
    Me too,
    Wait till a cold spell so that you know they are mostly in, but won't want to come out, before treating the nest.

    Good luck, I've recently removed a basket ball sized nest from our attic that was inhabited last year.

    Ogri the trog
    Improvise, Adapt & Overcome
    www.Reddragonbushcraft.com

  6. #6

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    I'm with martin on this one.
    You left the open invitation for them, so don't evict them, it would make you no different to one of those "git orf moi land" types.

  7. #7

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    Quote Originally Posted by beachlover
    I'm with martin on this one.
    You left the open invitation for them, so don't evict them, it would make you no different to one of those "git orf moi land" types.
    Sorry, I don't understand the logic of an "open invitation" there..I thought the kette was stored in a shed

    As for being a "git orf my land type", when it comes to vermin - guilty Living on an arable farm, we get a few types (rats, mice occasional wasp nests etc.). I guess you could say that living between two wheat fields and a grain store in the next door farm yard is an open invitation and I guess you would be right. I'm not embarassed to admit to eliminating them all on site though - all things have their place, but I'm afraid my loft space or outbuildings is not the place for wasps and my garden is not the place for rats or mice. YMMV

    Red

  8. #8

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    it will cost you but id say get someone in to got rid of them
    There are 2 kinds of people in this world the people who know and the people who dont. and i dont have a clue

  9. #9
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    Boil the kettle ??


    *runs away*


    Or, Just buy another one

  10. #10
    Join Date
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    Tennessee, U.S.A.
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    Dish detergent mixed with water in a spray bottle or even better a cheap pump sprayer works great for these pest.

    I often spray this mixture on and all around my home outside because of grandkids and everyone else being outside and it helps keep the stings to a minimum. The spray mix is safe and very effective, it drops the wasp or bees instantly and they die in a few seconds.

    I never spray honey bees, but wasp, yellow jackets and hornets I will spray. If you adjust the sprayer on a wide spray, it pretty much will cover them all even on very large nest.

    Mix one gallon of water to a half cup or a full cup of dish detergent of your choice, spray on hand and if it feels fairly soapy, it's perfect. Note: don't shake container, first put soap in, then add water slowly so as not to cause bubbles, gently swirl to mix.

    For nest in the ground, stick nozzle in hole and spray until bubbles start coming out, the bees try to come out through the soap and will die soon after.


    Robbie Roberson.

  11. #11
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    Git orf my land! I'm with Red on this one. I had a wasp nest in my garden a couple of years ago and it's no fun sharing with them all summer.

    That said, if the nest is confined to the kelly kettle then is it not portable? You could (carefully) relocate it to another location away from your house. Could be entertaining!
    It's not the years in your life that count but the life in your years.

  12. #12

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    If you want to get rid of them then sprinkle some almond essence around the entrance. They'll be gone before long.

  13. #13
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    There you go - a nice natural approach!
    Click here for BushMoot 2013 Ticket and Information pages...
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    Tone

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    The most important thing is not 'who's right' but rather 'what's right'



  14. #14

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    Quote Originally Posted by British Red
    Sorry, I don't understand the logic of an "open invitation" there..I thought the kette was stored in a shed

    As for being a "git orf my land type", when it comes to vermin - guilty Living on an arable farm, we get a few types (rats, mice occasional wasp nests etc.). I guess you could say that living between two wheat fields and a grain store in the next door farm yard is an open invitation and I guess you would be right. I'm not embarassed to admit to eliminating them all on site though - all things have their place, but I'm afraid my loft space or outbuildings is not the place for wasps and my garden is not the place for rats or mice. YMMV

    Red
    Hi Red,

    It was meant somewhat light heartedly and certainly not meant as seriously as you took it. Apologies. I simply meant that your Kelly kettle provided a suitable home and that if they were doing no harm other than making you seek an alternative method of making a brew, why evict them?
    If you already have a policy of eliminating wildlife that fall into the pigeon hole of vermin, why ask what others think you should do about the wasps?

  15. #15

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    I have seen a similar thing , a friend of mine got in his canoe and started paddleing down the river . Then for no apparent reason , screamed and rolled over !Guess who forgot to check the back of the canoe was clear ?
    He had quite a few stings on his legs , but the wetsuit took the brunt of it .
    we sunk the canoe which got all the wasps .
    Pumbaa

  16. #16
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    I think I'll leave them to the end of the summer, the spout is corked and they have set up home in the funnel, at this time the nest is small (about the size of a golf ball) and I'm going to attempt to move it with a long stick(a very long stick, a very very long stick ) hooked under the handle, got to give them a chance after all they are the gardeners friends so I've been told.
    Failing this I'll have to nuke em

    Ian

  17. #17
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    Apparently they eat all sorts of pests.

    Don't like the idea of a concentration of them round the old domicile though.

    Wasps nest Tinder?
    Mike

    If a man is talking in the woods and there is no woman to hear him, is he still wrong?

  18. #18

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    We get quite a few nests in the shed, I encouraged a few spiders to make their home there (not destroying their webs) and so far not one of those nests has managed to prosper. More of a prevention than a cure though I am afraid.
    True happiness is waking up cuddled into a warm woman on a cold morning.

  19. #19

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    I bet you could make a fortune if you auctioned it on Ebay.

  20. #20
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    Wasps are not friends to be encouraged near the house. I don't usually kill them because the scent just attracts others but I would not leave a wasps byke in my loft or sheds. Generally we find the little ball start of the nest early enough on that we can cut it free from it's support, usually a rafter, and throw it into the woodland. Wait until it's dark and cool then cover the byke with a paper bag, cut free and transport to where you want to dispose of it. It's just a tough woody paper and cuts free quite easily with a serrated bread knife. If it's too large or in an unreachable place, (the last one was behind the fascia boards behind the rone pipe beside the kids bedroom window ) get professional help. I called in an exterminator and he simply puffed some powder near the entrance. He said the wasps returning to the byke would carry it inside and that would be the end of the problem. It was
    My neighbour decided that I had been cruel and left the byke in her loft alone; her three year old woke up screaming when her afternoon nap became a nightmare; eight wasp stings on one small child, three on her face and the rest on her arms
    Everything has a right to live, but a beastie in my house is either out or dead. The moggie gets parole

    Cheers,
    Toddy
    Last edited by Toddy; 24-05-2006 at 23:01.
    You are never too old to have a happy childhood.
    Muddy is a state of happiness

  21. #21
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    I really dislike wasps and I'm afraid if it was me they'd have to go, although someone else would probably have to do the removing unless I could have some remote device
    In The Beginning there was nothing, which exploded!

  22. #22

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    Quote Originally Posted by Robbie Roberson
    I never spray honey bees, but wasp, yellow jackets and hornets I will spray. If you adjust the sprayer on a wide spray, it pretty much will cover them all even on very large nest.

    Robbie Roberson.
    Hornets are actually really docile and will only attack of their nest is in immediate danger ( someone trying to destroy it, for instance). With a little bit of bravery and perhaps madness you can go and stand next to a hornets nest in relative safety, but please don't try it!!
    I'm not lost, I'm somewhere where I don't know where I am.

  23. #23
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    The kettle is now in the allotment at the bottom of the garden, the fellow who owns it is a bit of an organic gardener and provided they stick to thier side of the deal and kill all the pests they can squat there til the end of the summer

    Ian

  24. #24
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    It'd make a cool photo Bet Kelly kettles would like to see it too

    Cheers,
    Toddy
    You are never too old to have a happy childhood.
    Muddy is a state of happiness

  25. #25
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    Elma, a fantastic solution.

    Wasps have a place in the natural order of things. If you kill them then something else lives that might eat some one's veg', and something else goes without a wasp for dinner. I'd have a small nest in the garden when growing things like cabbage.

    But in the house? By the door? I think the natural order of things would have me asking them to leave. They could move themselves or I'd offer a ride to the waspy after life I'm afraid. And I'm a hippy (allegedly)!

  26. #26
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    Permetherin (not sure of spelling) is the powder now used by pest control, Cymag is now un obtainable (and lethal to all). You may find that the kettle becomes too small for a really active colony and they move on when they cannot expand the nest any more.
    I like the almond essence idea and will remember to try that first before more lethal measures.
    Swyn
    "Why,sometimes i've believed as many as six impossible things before breakfast"
    The White Queen. Alice Through the Looking-Glass.

  27. #27
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    Beachlover, it was Elma who asked about the wasps nest, not Red


    A thought thats just passed through my mind....is an old wasps nest any use as tinder?

    Tiffers

  28. #28

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    wasps nest in the house is bad news for me at least. many peeps are alergic to bee stings or wasp stings.

    For me it's wasps, and a trip to A&E is a probability, depending on where I get stung. has'nt happened in ages, because i tend to respect the lil blighters outside. A nest indoors or around the house = eviction or worse.

    [my mum is alergic to bee stings. no fun when your hubby was a beekeeper ]
    Don Redondo

    a man without a woman is like a fish without a bike


    http://lostcoast.blogspot.com/

  29. #29

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    I had a little wasp’s nest in the work shop where I worked a while ago, I tried to
    knock it down with a broom pole and the little buggers come out (only a few). Here’s the best bit, I took out all the Florissant lighting in the work shop with the broom and missed the nest. After I cleaned up I got an aerosol and a lighter and burned them all to hell.
    I don’t like them at all.
    It’s like that! And that’s the way it is!
    http://www.flickr.com/photos/xnutter/

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