Hey,
You! Get Out of my Garden!
(Getting
rid of wasps in your garden and yard the GREEN way)
By
Patrick McNaughton,
Inventor and Owner of McNaughton Incorporated in Minneapolis, MN
Copyright
© 2010
I don’t hate wasps. I just don’t want them stinging me and the
people around me. Social wasps are the
notorious stingers of the insect world. We know them as hornets, yellow jackets, and paper wasps. Their
ability to sting, coupled with their great mobility, make wasps some of the
most feared of all insects. People react differently to being stung by wasps: Some
are hardly affected while others can suffer considerable pain and swelling. Some
people are seriously allergic to wasp stings and in some cases if they don't
get treatment, the sting can result in shock or death.
I love the outdoors, but
hate the flying, stinging insects. So, I
set out to create a pest control product that would be effective, affordable,
and environmentally-friendly. This I
knew; Wasps are attracted to food and sweet drinks, which is why they often
crawl inside your can of soda or beer. I’ve
seen this happen more than once where friends are stung in the mouth by a wasp
as they take a sip of their drink. In defense of the wasp, it stung because it
didn’t want to be swallowed by a big human mouth.
In 2003 when I designed
my wasp trap, I kept in mind the wasp’s tendency to crawl into small spaces in
search of food. It took a lot of trial
and error, but eventually, my Soda Bottle Wasp Trap was born. This is what it looks like.
This invention consists
of a plastic daisy-shaped device with small crawling holes that twists onto an
empty plastic soda bottle. The concept
is simple: Fill the bottle with sugared
water, sugared soda or beer, insert the vented entry tube, twist on the daisy
head, and set the trap around the perimeter of your garden or yard.
Wasps are attracted to
the sugar, so they sneak inside through the crawling holes in the daisy head,
and take a sip of the liquid. Trouble
is, once they get inside the bottle, they can’t get out. Voila. You
have a GREEN wasp trap that re-uses otherwise discarded plastic bottles and
eliminates the use of toxic bug sprays. It’s
bad for wasps, but very good for people and for Mother Nature. And I made it
affordable—less than $5.00.
Soda Bottle Wasp Trap has been a real success in the
marketplace for seven years now, and has many, many fans, especially gardeners
and backyard-loving people. It’s sold at
Tractor Supply stores and Ace Hardware stores nationwide and in numerous online
stores and catalogs.
Here are a few reasons
why I think people need to be wary of stinging insects and why my wasp trap has
been so well-received.
1)
Wasps can be a health hazard.
Controlling wasps and yellow jackets is a serious concern. The pain of a wasp sting is caused by their
venom, which is injected into
the victim through its stinger. It is the protein in
the venom that causes allergic reactions in people. Hundreds of thousands of people are stung by
wasps each year and over 100 of those people die from a wasp bite. My
wasp trap helps control the wasp population or at least the ones bugging you in
your yard or garden.
2)
Wasps think they own your property. Wasps
find gardens a natural spot to hang out and even nest in or nearby, which is
why so many gardeners are bitten while gardening. Wasps are territorial creatures and take it
as a threat when you enter “their garden.”
That’s when they attack. When
using my wasp trap, it is best to have a trap set out every 10-15 feet around
the perimeter of your garden.
3)
Wasp sprays are toxic. We live
in a time when people understand the hazards of randomly spraying harsh
chemicals and pesticides into the environment or onto the food you are growing
in your garden. [Check out the “Precautions”
on Raid Wasp & Hornet Killer 33 at http://www.killsbugsdead.com/fop_w_h_k_pre.asp.] My wasp trap doesn’t use chemicals to kill
the wasps. It lures them into the trap
with sugar water.
4)
Wasp spray cans and bottles use up resources. Bug
cans and sprays are made of virgin materials like plastic, aluminum, and steel.
My wasp trap twists onto an otherwise discarded plastic soda bottle and the
product itself is made from recycled materials.
5)
Vinegar and ice are nice after a bite. If you
are stung, using vinegar on the bite will neutralize the acidity and will
assist in the healing. Applying ice
directly on the bite will also help reduce pain and swelling. My wasp trap won’t help you if after you’ve
been bit! Sorry.
6)
Save a plastic bottle. Can you
believe that Americans throw away 2.5 million plastic bottles every hour? It’s easy to be GREEN when it comes to reducing the number of plastic bottles that are
made and later dumped into landfills.
Use less, re-use more often. My
wasp trap turns those empty bottles into a very useful product.
Here’s the Buzz word for
fall 2010 – Soda Bottle Wasp Trap! For
additional information or to order my wasp trap, visit www.sodabottlewasptrap.com.

Patrick McNaughton
Patrick@gadjits.com
www.inventing.org
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