Buffoon occasionally. Maybe ONE other ....um.... wind instrument. I'm otherwise musically untalented......
Stinking Hornets. Just came across a hornet Bungalow like I've never seen before. Trimming the neighbors overhanging maple before all the leaves become 2 tons of lawn art on OUR side of the fence, I start cutting back branches & limbs so it's easier to manage. Will have to douche it w/ long range hornet spray early tomorrow morning when it's only 62°. That's one way to get out of yard work for the rest of the day. It's probably a good 3" diameter .
This time last summer my home was yellowjacket central and I was catching hundreds. This year, I caught a few queens in early spring and eradicated an established nest in July and I have seen only three yellowjackets in the past 40 days or so -- one I managed to swat dead. Maybe just lucky, but hope luck holds.
Hiking in the Grand Park area of Mt Rainier National Park yesterday, I saw numerous fallen and abandoned paper wasp nests on or next to the trail. Well inside a federally protected wilderness area, safe from humans but not from recent weather events. But it wasn't one of them that got me. Some other kind of trail-side wasp or hornet, ground dwelling in a decaying log, did, on the back of the right hand. It was quickly apparent that this was going to be my strongest insect sting reaction since my early teens. Normally the sting pain starts fading after a few minutes, but this one kept growing, widening to the full width of the hand, with other tingles as far as the elbow. Puffiness also kept expanding, covering the entire back of the hand this morning. I've long been less reactive to insect stings than the spouse, but maybe that is changing. She'd also been seemed to reacting stronger in recent years.
Yellowjackets 2025 Well, in April 2025...I noticed a yellowjacket flying about, set out a trap and caught a queen, I guess as I saw no more until walking out of house today and seeing several of them crawling into a hole in the dirt about 12 steps from the house. Immediately sprayed pesticide powder on the entrance and now have about 40 yellowjackets circling the hole with some brave ones venturing into the hole. Should all be dead by Wednesday. My two epi pens are expired but should still work if needed.
@fuzzy1 local tissue responses to wasp chemicals are unpleasant, but if your immune system is not going anaphylaxis and constricting your air pipe, you are better off than you might imagine. That scenario is owned by all who sell epipens for lavish profits. I wish I could describe how to DIY epinephrine injection for about $USD5. So sorry.
In cases where you don't have the money to replace an expensive item regularly? YouTube can be your friend .
Wow: This nest I treated about a week ago was a bit of a challenge. Puffed insecticide powder down hole. By the next day, they built a new entrance. Not unexpected, so puffed the powder down second entrance. Next day a third entrance appeared.. Repeat powder application. Finally all disappeared by yesterday. That was like seven days. Ah well, they are gone...I hope...still lots of summer left.
We had wasps in a faux wall protrusion, last summer. Very persistent., applications of bug killer might have finally discouraged them. So far so good this summer. I did dig up one of our decoy wasp nests, ensconsed it on the adjacent porch. "Might" be working.
A year ago I relocated newly-under-construction wasp nests from my shed something like four times in a row. I had noticed the ladies overwintering on the inside of the door, and thought they might start building something when it got warmer, and sure enough I went out a little later in the spring and saw the small beginnings of a nest, 4 or 5 cells or so. So I would go back out in the dead of night and see it there, with the proud builder protectively wrapped around it, and I would drop her and her nest into a jar and relocate them to the front yard. Apparently a glass jar doesn't feel or smell like a predator, because she never seemed to get very alarmed by this, just more like "huh? whaz goin on?". And then I would smear some pennyroyal oil on the spot in the shed where she wanted to build, because it was rumored she'd be deterred by that. But I had to do that something like four times in a row last year. Main thing was remembering to check the shed often enough to not have a bigger nest by the time I'd notice. Only one time this year, though. I *think* maybe now it's late enough they're not looking for places to start....
i sprayed a growing nest under the gutter of my garage door the other evening, an easy spot to get at fortunately
You are determined and it's nice they cooperated with you. I have a fair number of wasp/hornets under the eaves of the house and outbuildings, but unless they are near a doorway, I leave them alone. The yellowjackets are so aggressive as summer progresses and so ready to attack, I have no tolerance for any nest making near the home. Out in the woods fine. Well, hardly July, so the little critters won't really get too aggressive for another 30-45 days.