If possible mark off any entrance holes you find so that you can easily identify them later.
Bees nest behind metal siding covering wood siding.
The problem with treating pests that lodge behind this shielding is that it gives you very little access to inject anything meaningful.
If the bees are boring holes into your siding they are carpenter bees not bumble bees.
Observe the bees during the afternoon as that is the most active time of day for yellow jackets.
Now you might think that a hive hidden away inside of the siding on your home whether it s wood vinyl or aluminum is hard to get rid of but actually they re pretty safe and easy to eliminate because you won t have to touch them directly.
Carpenter bees drill holes into dead wood to create nests.
This is the most efficient and fastest way to eliminate a bee yellow jacket wasp nest.
Even though a hive nestled inside the wood aluminum or vinyl siding is hard to actually reach these are in fact some of the easiest and safest types of nests to get rid of because they require no contact with the bees or nest.
Bees will usually sequester themselves away in overhangs cracks window and door frames and under siding basically anywhere they can build a cozy nest.
Then pull the duster out and puff directly at the hole to cover the opening from about 5 inches away.
Ron hazelton shows you how to easily get rid of them.
This usually involves dead standing trees but sometimes they can end up in your deck fascias or other wooden structures.
Locate the entrance through which the bees are entering your siding.
Carpenter bees can do extensive.
If they have a substantial hive with a lot of brood eggs and larval bees it will rot and stink after the bees are killed.
If you don t care about that chloroform will kill them nicely without removing the siding.
Common places for bees to hide and build nests include overhangs cracks window frames shutters door frames and underneath the siding.
Follow where they seem to disappear into the side of your house.
Bees and wasps can damage wood on exteriors and make nests under siding not to mention the stinging.
I m a beekeeper and i have been an exterminator also.
As each egg is laid she encloses it with a partition of chewed wood pulp and then creates another pollen loaf for the next egg.
Bees are so endangered that i would never suggest anything that could cause them harm.
Carpenter bees are so named because they build nests by boring holes in weathered intact wood often the exterior walls and siding of homes and other structures.