North Shore Times (New Zealand)

MOZZIE ALERT

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LOOK OUT FOR QUEEN WASPS

They may be setting up residence at your place. Usually, the big queens find a dry space in the ground, perhaps amongst the roots of a dead tree or under a pile of prunings, and build their papery nests there. Unearthing nests in sites like these can be painful experience­s, as I can attest, along with many other gardeners who have learned that wasps dislike disturbanc­e and are quick to share their annoyance with you. I’ve been stung on many occasions, and usually don’t know what’s going on until they’ve landed a good many hits. This year, I’ve discovered a queen German wasp constructi­ng the core of what she no doubt hopes will be a much larger nest among the rafters of the loft over our garage. So far, it’s only the size of a golf ball, but I can see several grubs wriggling in there and imagine that once born, they will add to the structure. I’m going to intervene before they get that far and I suggest that if you know of a wasp nest developing in the same way, you attend to it now, while it’s tiny, as it won’t stay that way for long. Robert Guyton

Check your ponds, tubs and pools, not for wasps, but mosquitoes – the larvae, not the parents. Still water is home right now to the wriggling larval form of the mosquito and you’ll see them breaking the surface of the water in order to breathe through what seems to be their rear ends. Left to mature, the wrigglers will metamorpho­se into flying, adult mosquitoes and do all they can to make your life a misery. Raise frogs to eat the humming, bloodsucki­ng

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