Spray late in the evening when more insects will be inside the hive.
Yellow jacket wasps are territorial. When you come upon a yellow jacket wasp hive it is important to either have a plan of action in place to prevent serious injuries from occurring.
http://www.pestid.msu.edu/InsectsArthropods/YellowjacketsVespulaspp/tabid/258/Default.aspx The yellow jacket queen leaves the hive to find a place to overwinter under bark on a tree, the hive dies. The queen will start a new hive elsewhere in the spring.
A hive usually refers to a large honey bee colony which has nursery chambers as well as honeycombs to store the honey they produce. A wasp, yellow jacket, bumblebee nest is simply where they live and raise young since they do not produce honey.
Its best to get someone to come out and deal with it...they will probably spray it with smoke to subdue the bees, then freeze the hive with liquid nitrogen.
The best way to get rid of bee hives under a deck or anywhere is to spray the whole hive and area with dish soap or laundry detergent. The soap will coat their wings and they will not be able to fly and it will clog their thorax which is how they breathe.
The color yellow is not a face's hive for bees
I don't know how to locate the hive, but bug spray helps.
They are Carnivores. Since im a beekeeper i see them flying around the beehives picking up the dead honey bees that are laying in front of the hive on the ground! The house bees will carry the dead bees out the front door and the yellow jackets, wasps etc will carry them off! That's just nature at its finiest!
The first thing you should do is use bug spray to get all of the bees to fall and not move.Next,Get a large shovell and knock the hive down.Then,get gloves.Finally,use your gloves and burry the hive so other pest can't find it.;)
Cold.
could possibly be both. He is wearing a yellow shirt is simply an observation about his attire. If a hive of locusts have landed on the yellow shirt, the explanation is that the locusts do not like the yellow shirt.
when do hornets leave there hive in Tennessee