Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:PP. I see you put wasps in the title. Be precise when reporting the hazard.
Wasps may be more likely to have a nest attached to the house.
Paper wasps are good for the environment. Sad that city people want to kill them. I think one should expect some nature when they are staying around nature
Agreed but, the house needs to be bugproof. And, the Reddit thread recommends removing nests in places where the wasps may get startled (doors, etc.). Because they may attack unpredictably.
Most humans everywhere are intolerant of insect colonies in/around their living areas.
so you go to the woods and the house needs to be "bug proof" that isn't a thing no house is "bug proof" will you complain to the host if a dear shits on the front porch
PP. I'm more thinking about cases where a wooden house has gaps and there are creatures getting inside through the gaps. Fixing the gaps is bug proofing.
I once visited a ski cottage where ladybugs were nesting in the walls AND they were coming out in the living room during the winter in large quantities and dying and falling on the carpet.
My family also had some kind of bee or wasp chew through an attic ceiling and get into an upstairs bedroom (doors were closed). My family members were out of town and came home to find the entire bedroom covered in dead insects.
Addressing the source of these problems is bugproofing.