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Unlike yellow jackets, bald-faced hornets and paper wasps, bees do not die in the winter, and typically stay alive by staying inside their hive and feeding on honey created throughout the year.
Bald-faced hornets are an easily identifiable species of yellow jacket. Unlike most other yellow jacket species, the bald-faced hornet has black and white or ivory coloring on its face, thorax ...
The bald-faced hornet isn’t really a hornet. Instead, it’s a yellow jacket. And it just so happens to be the largest type of yellow jacket in the Pacific Northwest, even though it’s not yellow.
Bald-faced hornets bushwhack, kill and eat yellow jackets. Now that's one tough insect. They're the terminators of the wasp world. If the adult hornet doesn't make its own meal of the yellow ...
Paper wasps create nests in ceilings and bald-faced hornets choose trees. If a nest is found for any of these vespids (yellow jacket, wasp, or hornet) in an area frequented by people or pets, your ...
Apparently, along with white-faced, they are also called white-tailed hornet, bald-faced yellow jacket, black jacket, and bull wasp. They are stout in body and black with white markings on the front ...
The yellow jacket is the most common stinging insect in the South, ... Hornets, including the bald-faced hornet and the European hornet, make their nests above ground, ...
Don’t be surprised if you see more wasps and other stinging insects buzzing around as fall sets in and the days get cooler. Yellow jackets, bald-faced hornets and paper wasps are all reaching their ...
If you encounter a bald-faced hornet nest next summer, have no fear. Leave them be; they'll reciprocate. And think about all of those pesky yellow jackets they're taking out!
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