• Wasp light

    From Anon Emous@21:1/5 to All on Tue Jul 18 20:01:56 2017
    http://edition.cnn.com/2017/07/04/us/wasps-firework-garage-trnd/index.html


    Remember I 66 or so years the neighbour down the road tried to
    burn out bee's/wasps from his house and set it alight.


    Wasp Light

    Well the tent caterpillar season [was]dobe upon me. I usually take one of my 12 Ga’s and turn them into tent caterpillar pâté. Indeed I purchased some 12 Ga #12 shot shells for the job. However, there are three (so far) just off the road upon which I
    am not planning on standing upon and firing away so … time for a “wasp light”. As described in Weingart it is a gerb tied to a stick (I used ½” EMT). He suggests 9 pts. potassium nitrate, 1 ½ sulphur and 5 charcoal. Kentish suggests “an
    arsenial suffocating fire” composition of -- 14 pts. potassium nitrate, 5 sulphur, 3 mealpowder and 1 realgar. Burning the suckers works for me.

    I rammed a piece of paper towel into the end of ¾” id cardboard tube then tapped over the bottom, rammed in la comp with a wooden dowel rod leaving a little loose material on top. Tapped on a short piece of visco for convince. It burns at a reasonable slow rate with enough flame to do the job.


    The Wizard is In.
    -----------------
    [Poisoner] Marquise de Brinvilliers,
    so despised that, when she died and
    her ashes were scattered to the wind,
    Madame de Sevigne wrote: "All Paris
    ran the danger of breathing in the
    atoms of this little woman and
    thereby becoming infected with the

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From docsuds@gmail.com@21:1/5 to Anon Emous on Tue Jul 18 22:22:12 2017
    On Tuesday, July 18, 2017 at 11:01:58 PM UTC-4, Anon Emous wrote:
    http://edition.cnn.com/2017/07/04/us/wasps-firework-garage-trnd/index.html


    Remember I 66 or so years the neighbour down the road tried to
    burn out bee's/wasps from his house and set it alight.


    Wasp Light

    Well the tent caterpillar season [was]dobe upon me. I usually take one of my 12 Ga’s and turn them into tent caterpillar pâté. Indeed I purchased some 12 Ga #12 shot shells for the job. However, there are three (so far) just off the road upon which
    I am not planning on standing upon and firing away so … time for a “wasp light”. As described in Weingart it is a gerb tied to a stick (I used ½” EMT). He suggests 9 pts. potassium nitrate, 1 ½ sulphur and 5 charcoal. Kentish suggests “an
    arsenial suffocating fire” composition of -- 14 pts. potassium nitrate, 5 sulphur, 3 mealpowder and 1 realgar. Burning the suckers works for me.

    I rammed a piece of paper towel into the end of ¾” id cardboard tube then tapped over the bottom, rammed in la comp with a wooden dowel rod leaving a little loose material on top. Tapped on a short piece of visco for convince. It burns at a reasonable slow rate with enough flame to do the job.


    The Wizard is In.
    -----------------
    [Poisoner] Marquise de Brinvilliers,
    so despised that, when she died and
    her ashes were scattered to the wind,
    Madame de Sevigne wrote: "All Paris
    ran the danger of breathing in the
    atoms of this little woman and
    thereby becoming infected with the

    I thought all the smoke from Weingart's wasp light did was similar to how beekeepers use smoke to put their bugs to sleep -- that you would then take the wasp nest & dispose of it along with the incapacitated wasps.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Peter Fairbrother@21:1/5 to docsuds@gmail.com on Wed Jul 19 09:48:56 2017
    On 19/07/17 06:22, docsuds@gmail.com wrote:
    On Tuesday, July 18, 2017 at 11:01:58 PM UTC-4, Anon Emous wrote:
    http://edition.cnn.com/2017/07/04/us/wasps-firework-garage-trnd/index.html >>

    Remember I 66 or so years the neighbour down the road tried to
    burn out bee's/wasps from his house and set it alight.


    Wasp Light

    Well the tent caterpillar season [was]dobe upon me. I usually take one of my 12 Ga’s and turn them into tent caterpillar pâté. Indeed I purchased some 12 Ga #12 shot shells for the job. However, there are three (so far) just off the road upon
    which I am not planning on standing upon and firing away so … time for a “wasp light”. As described in Weingart it is a gerb tied to a stick (I used ½” EMT). He suggests 9 pts. potassium nitrate, 1 ½ sulphur and 5 charcoal. Kentish suggests “
    an arsenial suffocating fire” composition of -- 14 pts. potassium nitrate, 5 sulphur, 3 mealpowder and 1 realgar. Burning the suckers works for me.

    I rammed a piece of paper towel into the end of ¾” id cardboard tube then >> tapped over the bottom, rammed in la comp with a wooden dowel rod leaving a >> little loose material on top. Tapped on a short piece of visco for convince. It burns at a reasonable slow rate with enough flame to do the job.


    The Wizard is In.
    -----------------
    [Poisoner] Marquise de Brinvilliers,
    so despised that, when she died and
    her ashes were scattered to the wind,
    Madame de Sevigne wrote: "All Paris
    ran the danger of breathing in the
    atoms of this little woman and
    thereby becoming infected with the

    I thought all the smoke from Weingart's wasp light did was similar to how beekeepers use smoke to put their bugs to sleep -- that you would then take the wasp nest & dispose of it along with the incapacitated wasps.


    I dunno, but it doesn't sound likely - smoke causes (honey) bees to
    think their nest (they aren't called hives unless they're the square
    things provided by a beekeeper) may be burning, and they fill up on
    honey in order to save it.

    This makes them lethargic as their tummies are full of honey (which they
    don't normally get to eat much of), and they are less likely to sting.

    It doesn't work with eg most bumble-bee nests, just honey bees.

    Wasps not having any honey ... however wasps's nests being a lot more
    flammable than bees' nests ...

    arsenical, flame

    --Peter Fairbrother

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  • From Anon Emous@21:1/5 to All on Fri Jul 21 19:34:14 2017
    I dunno, but it doesn't sound likely - smoke causes (honey) bees to
    think their nest (they aren't called hives unless they're the square
    things provided by a beekeeper) may be burning, and they fill up on
    honey in order to save it.


    I incinerated them.



    The WiZard is In.
    -----------------
    Despite—perhaps because of—these marriages, William
    [of Nassau, Prince of Orange] was rich only in lands,
    poor in money. By 1560, he was almost a million florins
    in debt. In a flurry of economy he dismissed
    twenty-eight of his cooks.

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    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)