mapper
Veteran Member
A story about a yellow jacket. This happened nearly 3 years ago. For our firewood we keep it under a shed and have a small rack in the garage that holds about what 1 row across a full-size pickup bed holds. We haul that much to the garage when needed, then carry enough for a day inside as needed and stack on the hearth next to the wood stove. One night I'm carrying wood inside and I grab a split block in the middle on the pointed edge. Soon after I feel something poking in the middle of my palm, but I ignore it at first thinking it's just a splinter. As I'm trying to grab a piece with my other hand the pain keeps getting worse until I realize it's not a splinter. I drop everything and go inside to run cold water on it and get some ice (don't really know why, that's just the first thing I thought about). I start worrying about what it could have been. Was it a scorpion, I've never been stung by one, how bad could this get? Could it have been a brown recluse, would the reaction be that quick? I finally go out to see what it was and this is what I found.
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I don't know why it was in my firewood unless it thought that was a good place to hibernate.
As far as removal, I just just hornet/wasp spray after dark until I no longer see activity. Depending on where it is I may dig it up, otherwise I'll just keep coming back for a few days. I'll typically shine the area with my headlights, they tend to not be able to see me that way and just fly towards the lights.
Yellow jackets queens do hibernate during the cold months and they do like a good woodpile to do it in. I have been stung in the arm and chest by the little boogers and had them wake up in the house and Buzz around. I get in the habit of giving each piece of firewood a quick look and knocking off any I find, they move really slow when cold so however many I find don't get too far before my size eleven descends on them
And remember, each one of them will start a new colony next summer, kill it and a couple hundred aren't going to be pestering you in a few months.
I also find them in the shop fairly frequently, sucking them into the dust collector gives a certain satisfaction, I wonder how they fare spinning around at high speed in the cyclone:confused2: