CARPENTER BEE HUNTING
Each Spring here in North Carolina when the weather warms up, carpenter
bees will fly around our deck looking for a place to bore holes into the
wood members and lay their eggs. In the past, I have used a tennis
racket or whatever piece of wood slat that I could find to swat them,
knocking them to the ground and stepping on them.
I have sprayed their bore holes with various chemicals and pushed wire
into the holes and many times were able to cause them to exit the the
chamber they made and finish them off with a heavy foot.
TWO TYPES OF CARPENTER BEES HERE IN NC
There are several different species of carpenter bee species around
the continental US, however, in North Carolina, we only have 2 species:
Xylocopa virginica (larger species) and Xylocopa
micans (smaller species of the two) also called the eastern and
southern carpenter bees. I believe the carpenter bees on our
property is the larger species!
NEW APPROACH TO REDUCE THEIR POPULATION
Since carpenter bees generally will hover for a second or two, that
is the time to swap them if they are in range. This year I decided
to try my luck at shooting them with a .22 caliber rifle using a shot
capsule manufactured by CCI. There are a plenty of very small lead
pellets in the shot capsule aka bullet and will spread about 2 to 3
inches at about six (6) feet distance giving you a fairly good margin of
aiming error. However, getting one to stay still while hovering is
a challenge within itself and your timing on pulling the trigger has to
be precise.
Last week I killed around 12 out of 20 shots and one carpenter bee
let me shoot at it three times while in flight before I connected.
EQUIPMENT USED
Above is a single shot Winchester model 67 .22 caliber chambered for
short, long and long rifle. I have information about this rifle in
this short story.
Above is pix of the ammunition used and it is costly, but very
effective if I do my part. You still have to be aware of your back
stop and have SAFETY paramount even though the pellets will not
do any serious damage, but up close it could cause serious bodily injury
and/or death!
WHAT A CARPENTER BEE LOOKS LIKE
The above carpenter bee was "harvested"
aka killed on 04-03-2023. It certainly does resemble a regular
bumble bee, but it has a black shiny abdomen which lets you know it is a
carpenter bee.
CLOSE-UP OF CARPENTER BEE HEAD
Pix of decapitated carpenter bee head with sawdust on its head.
HARVESTED SEVEN WITHOUT FIRING A SHOT
While locating the downed carpenter bee above, I noticed some fresh
sawdust from bore holes the carpenter bees had made in a couple wood
stakes that I use to stake our tomato plants. While viewing the
wood stakes, I observed a couple carpenter bees enter one of the bore
holes and immediately plugged the hole with a wooden dowel that was
close by.
Below is a fairly close-up pix of a couple bore holes:
I sprayed some Remington Rem Oil in the holes and they definitely got
a buzz going themselves.................grin if you must!
I took the two wooden tomato stakes to my basement shop and band
sawed them in half, nothing exact with pixs as follows:
In the pix above you can plainly see what is taking place. They
bored out a serious cavity with their mandible which moves in a circular
motion, of which the left portion has a chamber
where one egg is laid, food supply pollen (gelatin material) added for the
hatching larvae and each chamber is sealed off from the next which looks
like it was made from the wood itself. As stated later, the
chamber is 3/4 inch in length and the entire cavity is filled and then
sealed off. The eggs will hatch in about 38 days and then emerge
as an adult.
I think my Wadesboro High School biology teacher would be very
proud..................grin if you must!
LARVA CHAMBER CLOSE-UP
From what I have read, the carpenter bee egg (one egg to the chamber)
is laid in the
chambers and each chamber sealed off will develop and the larvae will feed off the food supply
stored; e.g., gelatin looking stuff and then bore their way out of the
chamber and will repeat the cycle of life doing some serious damage to
protected and unprotected wood as well.
The life cycle is: egg, larva, pupa and adult.
MORE CHAMBER PIXS
The center section of wood has four (4) carpenter bees, but they have
not laid any eggs yet in the chamber. The entire bore lengths are
as follows: 10 3/4 inches, 9 3/8 inches, and 8 1/8 inches with a
bore hole from the outside of 7/16 inch + and much larger inside diameter
of the entire chamber length. The egg laying chamber is 3/4 inch in length!
As evidenced by the pixs, carpenter bees will do serious damage to
wood structures, especially decks even though stained and/or painted.
In the past I have tried home made carpenter bee traps, but without
success.
In closing, I will keep watch on the additional wood tomato stakes in
the barrel and might add some regular untreated wood as a carpenter bee
lure which would cheaper than the ammunition used. However, the
.22 caliber rimfire rifle will be close by for those that think they are
an Apache helicopter.
I talked with our youngest daughter Lisa this afternoon and told her
what a retired person will do for entertainment and she definitely broke
into a very loud grin, however this might be a little more than
entertainment since I don't want the carpenter bees to do damage to our
deck, etc.
NOTE: My friend
Donald
Campbell of Halifax, NC sent the following information
concerning how he controls the carpenter bees, "Hi Bill, I fight them
things every year. Like you I've shot em, swatted em. You
can make a simple wooden trap with a hole drilled on each side at a
upward angle with a cut off drink bottle or pint jar in the bottom and
catch a lot of em. What I like best is a pesticide named (Bifenthrin)
spray around holes and in them if you can and the ground is covered with
dead ones the next morning, I haven't seen nothing yet that stuff
won't take care of. I mix it strong for bees about 3oz. Per. Gal.
1 gal. Concentrate goes a long way. Any farmer friend can get the
good stuff. Google Bifenthrin It gets mice too.
Later Bill, God Bless !
I will definitely locate the stuff!
UPDATE
On 04-06-2023, I located another carpenter bee bore hole in the wood
tomato stakes which showed activity by the sawdust that was expelled
from the bore hole. I gave the bore hole a couple shots of engine
starter fluid aka ether and took the tomato stake to my woodworking shop
and dissected in in half after reducing the length of the stake.
As evidenced by the above pix, the carpenter bee had four complete
egg nesting chambers and the 5th one was under construction. The
carpenter bee was sawed in half, but I think the engine started fluid
had already taken him out!
I plan to look through my scrap aka unallocated wood and find some
non-treated wood for carpenter bee "bait."
Web page created and published on 04-01-2023 by Bill aka Mickey
Porter and updated on 04-06-2023.
LEAVING ON A
SPIRITUAL NOTE
If you do not know Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savior, please take
this moment to accept him by Faith into your Life, whereby Salvation
will be attained.
Ephesians 2:8 - 2:9 8 For by grace are ye saved through
faith; and that not of yourselves: [it is] the gift of God: 9 Not of
works, lest any man should boast.
Hebrews 11:1 “Now faith is the substance of things hoped for,
the evidence of things not seen.”
Romans 10:17 “So then faith cometh by hearing, and hearing by
the word of God.”
Open this
link about faith in the King James
Bible.
Romans 10:9 “That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the
Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him
from the dead, thou shalt be saved.”
Open this
link of Bible Verses About Salvation,
King James Version Bible (KJV).
Hebrews 4:12 “For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and
sharper than any two edged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder
of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of
the thoughts and intents of the heart.”
Romans 6:23 “For the wages of sin is death; but the gift of
God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord.”
Romans 3:23 “For all have sinned, and come short of the glory
of God;”
Micah 6:8 “He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what
doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and
to walk humbly with thy God?”
Philippians 4:13 "I can do all things through Christ which
strengtheneth me."