s219
Super Member
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2011
- Messages
- 8,548
- Location
- Virginia USA
- Tractor
- Kubota L3200, Deere X380, Kubota RTV-X
I catch a few in the traps, but I found the best option is to go on the offense in the spring, to keep the local population knocked down.
I bought some Viper cypermethrin that I spray around the eaves of my barn, boat house, and home. Supposedly that will deter them, and it's also good at deterring wasp nests, spiders, etc. It won't make a mess on painted or finished surfaces.
I dust any new holes with Drione powder. If an adult bee stumbles out, I put a cork in the hole and know the powder will kill any larvae when they mature in mid/late summer and try to crawl out the hole. If no bee was in the hole, I wait a day or two to give them time to enter the hole and get dusted, then put a cork in the hole (if you don't wait and cork the hole, they will come back and try to drill next to the cork to get back in their tunnel).
I got a lot of good info here: carpenterbee control, CARPENTERBEE CONTROL, Carpenterbee control, carpenterbee control, Carpenter Bee Control, CARPENTERBEE CONTROL, Carpenterbees, carpenterbees, carpenterbee treatment, carpenter bees, boring bees, carpenterbee control
The other thing I do is kill them on sight anytime I see one. I probably get a dozen or so that way every year. This time of year they are very sluggish in the mornings. In fact, I saw a carpenter bee on the roof of my porch this morning, catching morning sun to warm up. I had half a mind to climb out the window and stomp him, but with my luck it would have turned into a project and I had a morning meeting to get to.
I bought some Viper cypermethrin that I spray around the eaves of my barn, boat house, and home. Supposedly that will deter them, and it's also good at deterring wasp nests, spiders, etc. It won't make a mess on painted or finished surfaces.
I dust any new holes with Drione powder. If an adult bee stumbles out, I put a cork in the hole and know the powder will kill any larvae when they mature in mid/late summer and try to crawl out the hole. If no bee was in the hole, I wait a day or two to give them time to enter the hole and get dusted, then put a cork in the hole (if you don't wait and cork the hole, they will come back and try to drill next to the cork to get back in their tunnel).
I got a lot of good info here: carpenterbee control, CARPENTERBEE CONTROL, Carpenterbee control, carpenterbee control, Carpenter Bee Control, CARPENTERBEE CONTROL, Carpenterbees, carpenterbees, carpenterbee treatment, carpenter bees, boring bees, carpenterbee control
The other thing I do is kill them on sight anytime I see one. I probably get a dozen or so that way every year. This time of year they are very sluggish in the mornings. In fact, I saw a carpenter bee on the roof of my porch this morning, catching morning sun to warm up. I had half a mind to climb out the window and stomp him, but with my luck it would have turned into a project and I had a morning meeting to get to.