Cina wrote: » At least we don't have those damn murderous devil spawn Asian Giant Hornets. Sweet mother of Jesus whatever aspect of evolution designed them needs to be shot and quartered.
Nedzer01 wrote: » Last Saturday I had lunch at home with the doors open - 5 or the guys invaded the kitchen. Coffee next morning in a cafe they were all over the scones n jam. August they seem to always to go gangbusters, probably just before they’re ready to croak it.
Deleted User wrote: » Ah lads, I thought, you know, after the Good Friday agreement we'd be more welcoming of them.
[Deleted User] wrote: » On the plus side they do a lot to keep the fly population under control. the adults aren't carnivores but the young are. The adults actively hunt flies to bring back to their nest. If the fly is too big they'll cut it in half then return to the same spot later to collect the rest.
Ultimate Seduction wrote: » Not sure how true this is. I get a great laugh watching big wasps eat daddy long legs off my wall every September.
[Deleted User] wrote: » It's 100% true I can assure you. Not me but my partner is something of an amateur botanist, he observes and records these things regularly. I've literally watched him feed flies to wasps out of his hand! :eek:
Ultimate Seduction wrote: » Yeah , I've watched them eat daddy long legs, large wasps too not just baby's ? Unless they regurgitate them but I've definitely watched them eat full daddy long legs.
rn wrote: » Observing a nest in my garden that has my dog plagued. The dog dug a hole at boundary wall that exposed a gap in plaster in a 9inch cavity block wall... And wasps moved in this summer. The dog, of course, can't help but attack/play with the nest at least once per day because she loves the hole she dug. She's a golden retriever, so very thick coat of hair. Anyway the wasps land on back of her neck, between shoulders and calmly burry down into her long hair to sting her. Meanwhile she's leaping about demented.
archer22 wrote: » IMO most people get stung because they start flailing their arms and trying to swat the wasp when it comes near them. I have never been stung by a wasp and I am pretty sure the reason is because I never panic when they come near me.
Deleted User wrote: » On the plus side they do a lot to keep the fly population under control. the adults aren't carnivores but the young are. The adults actively hunt flies to bring back to their nest. If the fly is too big they'll cut it in half then return to the same spot later to collect the rest.
Akabusi wrote: » I don't get peoples reaction when a wasp comes near them, the sting is quite mild, maybe 1 level up from a nettle