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Can't, can't we just use the CO2 to make them dormant and then move them? |
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We like bees. Bees are good. |
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This is good in that the bees would not get riled up. They would drift gently to sleep. Good too in that CO2 will not damage components in the wall. Less good in that the wall space may be large and it could be difficult to achieve the needed concentration of CO2. |
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Yesterday, for fun, I threw a few pellets of dry ice
into a wasps' nest - it was a hole-in-the-ground
nest. The little fuckers actually waited until the
pellets had shrunk down to a manageable size,
then pushed them back out. |
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Wasps are fair game. Bees not so much, but I
guess there's a limit to human tolerance. |
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However, if the problem persists you could always
replace part of the drywall with glass, and enjoy
watching your personal bee colony. |
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// a few pellets of dry ice ..... there's a limit to human tolerance // |
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But fortuitously, there's no limit to human intolerance - especially when directed towards yellow-and-black stinging insects. |
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Dry ice is little more than a signifier of future action. Hexane is much more useful, or any number of cyanide compounds. Carbon disulphide has much to recommend it; phosphorous also has beneficial effects, if a solid is preferred. However, liquid oxygen remains a favourite, as it allows the evil little buggers to be burnt and frozen simultaneously, a most satisfactory outcome. |
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I might try liquid nitrogen, which should have a
variety of effects. Of course, given its tendency to
boil quite violently, the result might just be a sudden
volcano of cold, breathless, pissed-off wasps. |
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Just regular white phosphorous, the stuff out of a WP grenade. Produces a very satisfactory (and corrosive) "smoke" of phosphorous pentoxide. Doesn't half make 'em buzz (for their last few seconds of life). |
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...and when the last jar of honey goes up for auction..."Do I hear one million?" |
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Phosphorous is an adjective. Phosphorus is a noun. |
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