Manchester Pest Control Wasps’ Nests Destroyed £29.50
Manchester Pest Control Wasps’ Nests Destroyed £29.50
Manchester Pest Control Wasps’ Nests Destroyed £29.50 – The very early mild spring of 2009 has been exceptionally kind to the hymenoptera (wasps, bees and ants) in the Manchester area, and here at Manchester Pest control we reported our first wasps’ nest call out on May 11th of this year, virtually a full month earlier than expected.
This means that wasps will be exceptionally plentiful this summer and the nests will be much larger than normal by
the end of summer.
By the end of summer a large wasps’ nest may contain 20 – 30,000 wasps and with the milder weather many nests can continue to be active into December, with many active call outs being received during November.
Manchester Pest Control charge just £29.50 to destroy a wasps’ nest and can usually provide a same day service, although this may vary during the busy summer period.
However, once the nest has begun producing the new queens (approx 2000 per nest) from around mid-September then additional work to destroy these queens, such as smoking or fogging, may be necessary at additional cost.
To arrange a wasps’ nest call out call us on 0800 019 8382.
Wasps’ Nests Destroyed In Manchester £29.50
Wasps’ Nests Destroyed In Manchester £29.50
No Price Increase For 2009 – Fixed Price £29.50
Wasps’ Nests Destroyed In Manchester – Manchester Pest Control destroy wasps’ nests in the Manchester Area in 2009 for a fixed price of £29.50. We do not charge extra for nests destroyed in the evening, on a weekend or on a bank holiday. We work Sunday afternoon until 6.00 pm, Call us on 0161 452 3165.

Manchester Wasps' Nest 2007
The annoying wasp season is almost with us once more, what would summer be without our old friends the wasps to annoy us as we enjoy our summer evening barbeques?
The wasp has a biology that means they are rarely seen much sooner than July as until then only the queen wasp is in the nest.
In early spring the over-wintering queens leave their hibernating quarters to find nesting sites which could be in a hole in the ground, a bush or artificial structures such as chimneys eaves, lofts and attics, garden sheds etc.
The new queen starts to construct her nest with a papery material that she makes by chewing small pieces of wood mixed with saliva; this is known as Wasp paper.
She will raise the first few workers by her own efforts and those workers will then commence the enlargement of the nest and rearing the immature Wasps to follow.
Nest construction starts in earnest in June and will reach its maximum in size in September, when 5 – 30,000 workers may be present. These workers will collect food up to 400 metres from the nest. The size of wasp colonies will vary from year to year, the severity of the previous winter is probably the main factor.
In the mid-September the immature queens mate and leave the nest to find hibernation sites, the rest of the nest dies out and the nest is never used again.
Individuals react differently to being stung by wasps; some are hardly affected, others suffer considerable pain and discomfort and a few become seriously allergic to being stung, which in rare cases results in sudden death due to anaphylactic shock.
Control
It is adviseable to let a professional Pest Control Officer deal with a Wasps’ nest for the reasons mentioned above. An insecticide will be used to cover the entrance to the nest. Returning wasps will carry the insecticide into the heart of the nest and within an hour all wasps should be dead.
It is not a good idea to allow a wasps’ nest to remain untreated as the new queens produced by the nest will invariably build nests nearby in the following spring resulting in many more nests the following year. For this reason several nests are often clustered together in a neighbourhood a locality.
No Price Increase For 2009 – Fixed Price £29.50
Wasps’ Nests Destroyed In Manchester £29.50
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