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Who knows what this thingy is.

Started by Timbbuc2, May 30, 2017, 01:51:05 PM

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Timbbuc2

Quote from: anlauto on May 30, 2017, 04:17:07 PM
Quote from: Timbbuc2 on May 30, 2017, 02:12:29 PM
Winner/Winner Chicken Dinner. It is a wood boring bumble bee trap. And it works. Anyone ever been around a old barn has seen these Bumble Bees flying around. But they are so lazy they look for a hole that has already been drilled.

I will be filing a grievance, because technically a Bee is an "insect"....I think I should have the illusive "chicken dinner" :pullinghair:

Bees are flying insects closely related to wasps and ants, known for their role in pollination and, in the case of the best-known bee species, the European honey bee, for producing honey and beeswax. Bees are a monophyletic lineage within the superfamily Apoidea and are presently considered a clade, called Anthophila.
Bee - Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bee

OK everyone gets a trophy  :veryexcited: and a chicken dinner,
Get in, I'll drive

Timbbuc2

Quote from: Daveh on May 30, 2017, 03:19:24 PM
Those darn bees are always digging holes in my soffits.
These traps really work, you should get one, I did see a version of this at Lowes.
Get in, I'll drive

XeGnome

Quote from: cuda hunter on May 30, 2017, 09:04:09 PM
What is on the inside?  How does it keep the bee from just going back outside?

Don't think of it as a "trap" as much as an "easy" nest for the queen to start off in.  Catch her and you will have a fantastic tomato harvest that year!


Timbbuc2

Apparently they are not too bright, once they fall into the jar they cannot find their way back out. I have caught around 10 this year. The rascals were drilling into the wood on my small shop. Looks like you drilled 1/2" holes all in it.
Get in, I'll drive

318Stroker

Looks like a birdhouse with a septic system attached... :)

ViperMan

I have a sh!t load of those m'er f'ers around our pool - the deck is slowly rotting away and, while those bees typically don't prefer treated woods, I believe the "treated" aspect of the decking has expired, and it must now be delicious or something...  Anyways, I have 2 of these traps hanging near their nests and while I have dozens of them captured, I still keep getting more.

Sidebar, while you can get some fancy smoke to pump into the existing nests to kill them, I've found that a little brake cleaner does a helluva job as well...  ;)

(Oh and also sidebar, it's a rental property, thus why I haven't replaced the deck...)  ;)

Timbbuc2

Quote from: ViperMan on June 20, 2017, 07:29:30 AM
I have a sh!t load of those m'er f'ers around our pool - the deck is slowly rotting away and, while those bees typically don't prefer treated woods, I believe the "treated" aspect of the decking has expired, and it must now be delicious or something...  Anyways, I have 2 of these traps hanging near their nests and while I have dozens of them captured, I still keep getting more.

Sidebar, while you can get some fancy smoke to pump into the existing nests to kill them, I've found that a little brake cleaner does a helluva job as well...  ;)

(Oh and also sidebar, it's a rental property, thus why I haven't replaced the deck...)  ;)
I have done the same thing, WD-40 works good as well, spray it in the hole and it sounds like a Mopar cranking up. Also they dont like painted wood.
Get in, I'll drive