I don't like to use the word hate, but.......
#31
Well I don't know so much about harmless... Those things are vicious when you manage to tick one off! They can jump pretty darned far, run really friggin fast and have a nasty bite... I always remember seeing pigeons and other birds in their webs when I lived in Florida. I recall them having a pretty nasty neurotoxin. I also remember learning how to shoot by target practicing on them with my dad's pellet rifle; it was pretty rewarding (messy) when you hit one though
#32
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Administrator / Free Time Specialist
Joined: Nov 2005
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From: Birmingham, Alabama
If it flies and has a stinger I don't like it...period.
My wife was watching me through the window a couple of weeks ago as I prepared to spray a big nest of red wasps that had set up camp in the eave of our house. I snuck up on them real slow with a big can of wasp and bee killer (which is SUPPOSED to drop them instantly). Once I got close enough I let 'er rip with that wasp killer. Most of them dropped to the ground but two of them came rip roarin' after me. I ended up using the whole can trying to "shoot" those two out of the air as they chased me. My wife thought it was quite amusing. I was just glad when it was all over. I got 'em though...first with the spray and then with the heel of my boot.
My wife was watching me through the window a couple of weeks ago as I prepared to spray a big nest of red wasps that had set up camp in the eave of our house. I snuck up on them real slow with a big can of wasp and bee killer (which is SUPPOSED to drop them instantly). Once I got close enough I let 'er rip with that wasp killer. Most of them dropped to the ground but two of them came rip roarin' after me. I ended up using the whole can trying to "shoot" those two out of the air as they chased me. My wife thought it was quite amusing. I was just glad when it was all over. I got 'em though...first with the spray and then with the heel of my boot.
You can be my huckleberry. Fear has nothing to do with it, he stung me and I swatted him. His buddies showed up and started talking smack and the fight was on.
#33
You got that right. I was riding my motorcycle one nice sunny day, enjoying the experience, when one of those little buggers flew in between my helmet and my head. Trying to maintain control of the motorcycle while stopping so I could kill that little so-and-so was quite a challenge.
#34
Well I don't know so much about harmless... Those things are vicious when you manage to tick one off! They can jump pretty darned far, run really friggin fast and have a nasty bite... I always remember seeing pigeons and other birds in their webs when I lived in Florida. I recall them having a pretty nasty neurotoxin. I also remember learning how to shoot by target practicing on them with my dad's pellet rifle; it was pretty rewarding (messy) when you hit one though
#35
Hoss, I have to admit, I'd pay a dollar to see that. I'm 49, 6'1" and a hair over 250. On his best day Michael Jackson couldn't move like me when those little so&so's were crawling my back side.
Personally, every place I got stung it hurt!
You can be my huckleberry. Fear has nothing to do with it, he stung me and I swatted him. His buddies showed up and started talking smack and the fight was on.
Personally, every place I got stung it hurt!
You can be my huckleberry. Fear has nothing to do with it, he stung me and I swatted him. His buddies showed up and started talking smack and the fight was on.
#36
Yep, it's a little different type of rig. I was bush hogging the woods. The bush hog is all heavy duty, about a thousand pounds, and will cut trees in excess of four inches. I was cleaning out the underbrush around the keepers. The nice thing about this type of rig is it's on tires, not tracks so it's not too hard on the roots of the trees you're keeping. The material you're chopping up and their roots stay in place so you have very low erosion issues on the sloped areas.
#37
I was waiting for you to find the one post embedded in a thread about yellowjackets that had the word "skidsteer" in it :P :P.
Both I, and my dad have hit a yellow jacket nest with a weed-eater before.
RUN FOREST RUN is all I can say.
Both I, and my dad have hit a yellow jacket nest with a weed-eater before.
RUN FOREST RUN is all I can say.
#39
I've got 3 or 4 different kinds of wasps / hornets around here. There are the Yellow jackets, the mud wasps, paper wasps ect. They are extra thick this year and more aggressive too.
What I want to know is just how in the world do you discourage the buggers from being around? I have tried the traps, you know the inverted cone looking things, the jars with the little cone-shaped entrance holes, the different kind of so-called baits that you put inside of the traps. Guess what, None of them work!!! Lord knows, I've found several different ways to kill the little buggers, (at the cost of a lot of money, time, and stings) what I need is a deterrent, something like that. Anyone know if they have a natural predator?
What I want to know is just how in the world do you discourage the buggers from being around? I have tried the traps, you know the inverted cone looking things, the jars with the little cone-shaped entrance holes, the different kind of so-called baits that you put inside of the traps. Guess what, None of them work!!! Lord knows, I've found several different ways to kill the little buggers, (at the cost of a lot of money, time, and stings) what I need is a deterrent, something like that. Anyone know if they have a natural predator?
#40
Ah, ok, the ones that I was refering to are the irredecant orange ones with the gray head.... Oh and the brown one's from south america are the one's that have the nasty neurotoxin, tend to be aggressive, and are extremely fast. Turns out the ones that I used to target practice on are the harmless ones. Even though I did miss one once and it did jump off it's web and chase me
#41
Those little ones don't care. Even when you don't know they're around, so you don't even have time to show fear, they still decide to start something.
#42