Thread: Dozy Hornets?
View Single Post
  #5   Report Post  
Old 29-08-2010, 04:04 PM posted to uk.rec.gardening
Ian B[_3_] Ian B[_3_] is offline
external usenet poster
 
First recorded activity by GardenBanter: Aug 2010
Posts: 125
Default Dozy Hornets?

Donwill wrote:
On 29/08/2010 12:33, stuart noble wrote:
On 27/08/2010 23:20, Phil Gurr wrote:
"David in wrote in message
. fr...
Over the last three days I've found three hornets, once in the
bathroom,
then in the living room then one upstairs. Besides the mystery of
how they
got into the house I'm puzzled by why all three hornet just walked
very slowly along the floor and seemed almost in a daze. I
flattened each under
foot without them even attempting to fly away. Anyone else had any
dozy hornets? Why are they behaving like that? The ones I've
encountered occasionally outside seem anything but docile.

Well. bully for you, do you kill everything that you don't
understand! Hornets are much more docile than wasps and will only
become aggressive if
you get too close to the nests. Only the females have a sting and
the ones
that you killed were probably evicted males at this time of year and
were
quite harmless. When I was head gardener at Ashton Wold (near
Oundle) my house was on the edge of ancient oak woodland and
hornets were around us throughout the summer. They never bothered
us and we never bothered them.
They would come into the house at this time of year (usually on the
floor)
and we would scoop them up on a piece of paper and put them outside.
Hornets
are becoming rare in Western Europe and becoming endangered in the
UK, indeed, many in the UK have never seen a hornet.

Phil



I'm surprised the French don't shoot them

and eat them with honey or something :-) .


Apparently these days you're supposed to put them in a sack and beat them to
death with a shovel.