Relocation Experiment?

Starman8

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 17, 2010
Messages
630
So, the boat has been inactive since Spring for various reason$, and noticed a few days ago
some yellow jacket activity by the splashwell boot where the steering cable runs. Obviously a nest
up in the starboard transom/splashwell area.

By observation, a very active nest. Since getting at this would require attacking it from the cockpit, I tried
this experiment first.

I hitched up the boat, and drove it 100 feet away, stopped, and observed. Jackets were exiting, but none
entering, just as I hoped. My buddy and I then took off and drove another 1/4 mile, stopped, and observed
more exiting, none entering.

We then drove a mile or so, and repeated the process, this time agitating with a stick inside the boot. More
yellow jackets came out, none entered, and we took off, drove another 2 miles, and repeated until only 2
came out, which he whacked. Then we sat around and observed for about 15 minutes, NO ACTIVITY.

Upon arrival back, we parked the boat in a new spot about 100 feet away from where it was originally.
NO CURRENT ACTIVITY, but..............................

near the area where the boat was is a utlity cart, and about 50 jackets hung around there, they were
spray eradicated, and about an hour later, another 50 or so, and they were sprayed.

This reveals that when we took off, a good population of the workers were out of the nest, and they returned to
the spot, but not the nest now located 100 feet away, as of now, and the ones scattered around the area
are miles away.

I know the queen is still there with her girls, and the nest needs removal, but if we displaced the workers,
chances are the rest will move on, or make it safer to remove.

Crazy stuff
 

North Beach

Commander
Joined
Sep 29, 2008
Messages
2,022
Re: Relocation Experiment?

Yea well I'm alergic, so good luck with that......:)
 

86 century

Ensign
Joined
Sep 8, 2009
Messages
986
Re: Relocation Experiment?

Just stay the nest with some good stuff wait a wile rip her out of there.

I'm not allergic so a few sting don't bother me to much.

We have several fruit trees so bees are just part of it some times they end up where you don't want them.
 

GA_Boater

Honorary Moderator Emeritus
Joined
May 24, 2011
Messages
49,038
Re: Relocation Experiment?

So you spent the afternoon driving around messing with yellow jacket minds? Love it. Yellow jackets probably have some place or function on earth- Darned if I know or care, nuke 'em, Duke.
 

Starman8

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Sep 17, 2010
Messages
630
Re: Relocation Experiment?

Combination of a mild winter, a drought summer, residing in a high elevation, and an idle boat
made the nest choice easy.

Yellow Jackets are not bees, part of the wasp family, they eat other bugs, big deal, they are a nusance

The purpose of the "experiment" was an effort to thin the population before getting at it, and the
thinning is of the workers.
 

barato2

Commander
Joined
Dec 7, 2010
Messages
2,956
Re: Relocation Experiment?

in a boat hull, you don't have much choice. but i commonly just work around em and have never been stung. in one case, i was driving a 16 penny nail into a joist end, on the other side of which (ie, maybe 2" from where i was hammering) was a nest. no problems. and my ex-GF used to just get em to land on her hand to relocate em outside but i'm not that brave.

of course, i also have a bee colony living inside the walls of the boathouse........
 

STARCRAFT16SS

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Mar 25, 2008
Messages
344
Re: Relocation Experiment?

I like your method ...will have to try it if/when I get that problem...
I think I would have got rid of the nest BEFORE I came back home with the boat..
 

ctriverfish

Petty Officer 2nd Class
Joined
Apr 16, 2012
Messages
109
Re: Relocation Experiment?

A shop vac with a gallon of water in it works well. Find where they are going in and place the working end near the spot and turn her on. Sucks them little buggers in and no more bees spray a little bee killer in empty it in the morning. Works good if you find them in the ground place the end next to the hole and start her up just as it's getting dark the bees coming home and the bees leaving end up inside.
 

CheapboatKev

Vice Admiral
Joined
Oct 4, 2008
Messages
5,813
Re: Relocation Experiment?

in a boat hull, you don't have much choice. but i commonly just work around em and have never been stung. in one case, i was driving a 16 penny nail into a joist end, on the other side of which (ie, maybe 2" from where i was hammering) was a nest. no problems. and my ex-GF used to just get em to land on her hand to relocate em outside but i'm not that brave.

of course, i also have a bee colony living inside the walls of the boathouse........

A whole new meaning to Honey I'm home...lol
 
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