Things You'll Need
- Clear mixing bowl
- Lemon Joy
- Protective clothing
- 2 bottles of professional hornet killer with 15' spray
- Drione dust
Instructions
Locate the hornets' nest during the day and note which entrances the hornets use to get in and out. If the nest is underground, make careful note of where it's located.
Approach the nest at night. Like humans, bees, wasps and hornets sleep at night. They'll all be in the nest, not foraging for food or flying around, so this is the ideal time to take care of them. They won't be attacking you, and you'll be able to take care of them relatively painlessly. Go slowly so you don't wake them or disturb them. If you can't go at night, be especially careful to avoid shadowing the entrances they use.
Use a spray. If the nest is in a tree or on a playground, the porch, the house or some other high-up location, use a 15' spray like Raid to freeze the nest. Make sure you get the entrance, so you take out any hornets that were sent to guard the entrance. Then knock down the nest and spray it thoroughly. This will probably take two cans.
To wipe out an underground nest, very carefully dump a mixing bowl full of boiling water and a little bit of lemon cleaner down the hole. Then cover the hole with a shovel full of dirt or the mixing bowl. Put dirt around the edge of the mixing bowl and leave it there for several days. Watch it and make sure there are no more wasps flying around.
Add Drione dust to the equation (whichever method you've used to immobilize the hornets) by squeezing it either down the hole or onto the nest. This will finish off the process, killing all the hornets. Throw away the nest.