Wasps ate my garden furniture

by Ian Daniels on July 22, 2010

wasps eat garden furniture

Wasps gobble garden furniture
Photo by Paul Albertella

Are wasps devouring your garden furniture as well as your picnic?

Wasps always gatecrash our barbecues and garden gatherings during the summer months. It’s common to find them swarming around our drinks and attempting to steal jam from the sandwiches of children. But they do have another sting in their tail. They want your wood!

Many people have been complaining that this black and yellow army are eating their way through their precious wooden garden furniture, sheds, trellis and fencing. In their trail they can leave unsightly lines and chunks missing from your wooden tables, chairs and benches.

Wasps, unlike bees, do not produce wax and so need material to make their nests with. They use any wood they can find in the region, be it trees, logs or your garden furniture. Once wood fibers are gathered they mix it with saliva and soften it to produce a paper-like substance.

After hibernating through the winter, the queen will start chewing little bits of your garden furniture in early summer and use it to make a small golf ball size nest. Then once workers have eventually hatched, the nest is developed into a bigger nest, about the size of a football. Each of these nests requires a good amount of wood, and you could end up with furniture that looks old before its time.

So how can you stop this from happening?

There are numerous products available that can deter the wasps, or if necessary destroy the nest once and for all.

To eradicate a wasp nest in it’s entirety and drive out the wasps there are sprays that you can buy such as a Wasp Nest Destroyer Foam. These are reasonably priced and easy to implemented – they can be used up to 3 metres away from the nest to avoid getting stung.

If you don’t like the idea of harming the wasps or the wasp nest then there is another option. There is a new product that has been scientifically tested and has only been on the market for a few years. The Waspinator has been designed to mimic a wasps nest and can be hung wherever needed. An artificial wasp nest like this will be perceived as a competitor and threat, and will be avoided by all wasps within a 12 metre diameter.

If you can’t find a wasps nest externally but believe you have a nest in or around your house, look carefully for wasps going in and out of any small holes in the structure of your property. If you can see wasp activity every few seconds, you probably have a wasp nest inside the cavity.

Always be extremely careful if a wasps nest is found, and if unsure, contact your local council or a specialist for advice.

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{ 1 comment… read it below or add one }

Maralyn Jones September 29, 2010 at 12:33 pm

Hey Ian thanks for information…Now i cam eto know that wasps are really dangerous for our furniture…

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