DBP said:... The wasps we have here are not aggressive, but I don't know about English species.
BWGirl said:Maybe not in your neck of the woods, but the ones up here get down right surly! Especially if it's really hot!
DBP said:Really hot? In Wisconsin? Try DC in August, or points south any time after this month.
TheFlyingCamera said:I don't know about normal bug sprays that might be darkroom safe, but one tip for you- if you need something household-safe to take down wasps and/or other flying insects, Windex with Ammonia does an amazing job. The ammonia dissolves their wings and they drop out of the sky, then it dissolves their exoskeleton, and they suffocate on the ammonia fumes. Nasty way to go, but better them than you. If there are always a few of them in your darkroom, I suspect they have a nest you just can't see - either in the ductwork or behind the walls/ceiling.
Lopaka said:But you have to understand, after getting used to that -40 winter weather, Wisconsinites (and folks in northern Mich as well) start whining about the heat when the temp gets above 65F.
The aggressive wasps are European imports - those native to North America nest in the ground. If they are attaching their nests to buildings etc they are the other kind - the ones that show up en masse and steal the hamburger off your plate when you do backyard barbeque.
Bob
Quite likely... Norfolk was one of the main Anglo Saxon settlement areas when they migrated to (i.e. invaded) what was to later become England.DBP said:Weren't the local council mostly W.A.S.P.s too?
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