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Yellowjacket Control In Fairfax VA

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Yellowjacket Control Services In Fairfax VA

Miche Pest Control is a family owned and operated pest control company that provides high quality residential and commercial yellowjacket control services for homes and businesses in Fairfax VA and the surrounding areas. Our expert yellowjacket exterminators get rid of yellowjackets from homes and businesses fast, and use preventative treatments to keep the yellowjackets from coming back after they've been eliminated. Miche Pest Control has a 4.9 star rating and over 1,000 reviews online - call today or book online!

Yellowjacket Exterminators In Fairfax VA

Are yellowjackets ruining your outdoor events in Fairfax VA? Don't let these stinging pests ruin your summer fun – call Miche Pest Control for effective and efficient removal services. Our team of experienced exterminators is dedicated to providing top-quality pest control solutions to rid your home or business of pesky yellowjackets. We use state-of-the-art techniques and eco-friendly products to safely eliminate yellowjackets and prevent future infestations. Don't let yellowjackets ruin your enjoyment – give Miche Pest Control a call and enjoy a sting-free summer season. Contact us today!

Yellowjackets In Fairfax VA

Yellowjackets are aggressive pests in Fairfax VA that possess a painful sting and bite. You’ll find these bright yellow and black insects in the backyard, at picnics and other outdoor activities. Yellowjacket nests are usually built underground, although some species will construct their nests in hollow logs, trees, attics, between walls, or under eaves of houses. An underground yellowjacket nest is difficult to locate because the entrance is about the size of a nickel. Most yellowjacket workers forage for food within 1,000 feet of their nest -- a distance of three football fields. In the middle of the season -- usually June or July -- yellowjackets are drawn to protein sources, such as hamburgers on the barbecue grill. During the late summer to early fall, they tend to shift their diet to sweets, including soda and juice.

Yellowjackets scavenge for meat and sweet liquids, which brings them into frequent contact with humans. Yellowjacket attacks can be deadly for people who are allergic to their stings. Yellowjackets are more aggressive than other stinging insects such as wasps, hornets, mud daubers or bees. Yellowjackets can both sting and bite - in fact, they will often bite to get a better grip to jab their stinger in. Since they don't lose their stinger, they can sting numerous times, and will do so unprovoked.

Yellowjackets vigorously defend their nests. Swarm attacks can occur when someone accidentally steps in or hits a nest opening. Ground vibrations can also trigger attacks from underground nests -- thus, mowing lawns can be hazardous, especially during the late summer season when colonies are at their largest.

Yellow Jacket Bees In Fairfax VA

Although yellowjackets' yellow and black stripes are similar to those of bees, and even though they are both types of stinging insects, yellow jackets are not bees. Rather, yellow jackets are wasps and differ from bees in a number of ways.

The bodies of bees are fuzzier and more rounded in shape, while yellow jackets are noticeably smoother and thinner. Yellow jackets' bodies are narrower between the thorax and abdomen. Unlike bees, which have stingers with pronounced barbs and can sting only once before dying, yellow jackets are equipped with lance-like stingers with much smaller barbs, and are capable of delivering multiple stings without dying.

Yellow jackets also differ from bees in behavior and habits. They are predatory and will consume other insects. Yellow jackets are also scavengers of human food, and can be found swarming around trash cans or picnic sites in Fairfax VA and the surrounding areas. Yellow jackets will also feed on nectar, but they depend primarily upon insects, meat and fish for nourishment. Most bee species are significantly less aggressive than yellow jackets, which are territorial and may sting at even the slightest provocation.

Yellow Jacket Wasps In Fairfax VA

Yellowjacket or yellow jacket is the common name in North America for certain predatory social wasps. They are known simply as "wasps" in other English-speaking countries. Most of the yellowjacket wasps found in Fairfax VA are black and yellow like the eastern yellowjacket and the aerial yellowjacket; however, some are black and white like the bald-faced hornet. Others may have the abdomen background color red instead of black. They can be identified by their distinctive markings, their occurrence only in colonies, and a characteristic, rapid, side-to-side flight pattern prior to landing. All females are capable of stinging. Yellowjackets are important predators of pest insects.

Ground Nesting Yellow Jackets In Fairfax VA

Ground nesting yellow jackets construct paper nests that may contain thousands of larvae and adult workers. In Fairfax VA, these nests are typically located underground in abandoned rodent burrows or in other enclosed spaces such as tree cavities, wall cavities, wood piles, and dense ivy. During the fall, young queens mate and find protected areas (such as fallen logs, tree cavities, cracks in buildings, etc.) where they remain for the duration of the winter. When spring arrives, queens select nesting sites and begin the process of colony initiation (nest construction, deposition of eggs, and hunting for food). Once adult workers emerge, they take over many of the tasks of nest maintenance so that the queen can remain within the safety of the nest and lay eggs. Foraging ground-nesting yellow jacket workers commonly come into contact with people who are eating outdoors and may at times become extremely aggressive. The colony grows throughout the summer and into the fall, and eventually begins production of males and queens. When rain and/or freezing temperatures return, nests typically die out, and newly mated queens find protected areas to overwinter so the process can begin anew in the spring.

Fairfax VA

The City of Fairfax, also known as Fairfax City, Downtown Fairfax, Old Town Fairfax, Fairfax Courthouse, or simply Fairfax, is an independent city in the Commonwealth of Virginia. The City of Fairfax is an enclave surrounded by the separate entity Fairfax County. Fairfax City also contains an exclave of Fairfax County, the Fairfax County Court Complex. The City of Fairfax and the area immediately surrounding the historical border of the City of Fairfax, collectively designated by Fairfax County as "Fairfax", comprise the county seat of Fairfax County. The city is part of the Washington-Arlington-Alexandria, DC-VA-MD-WV Metropolitan Statistical Area as well as a part of Northern Virginia. The city is 17 miles west of Washington DC.

The intersection of U.S. Route 50 and U.S. Route 29 is located in the northeast corner of the city. The two major highways join to form Fairfax Boulevard for approximately 2.8 miles (4.5 km) through the city before separating. State Route 123, State Route 236 and State Route 237 pass through the city. SR 236 is named Main Street in the city and then becomes Little River Turnpike once the city line is crossed. Interstate 66 passes just outside the city limits and is the major highway serving the Fairfax region. Connections to I-66 from the city can be made via U.S. Route 50 and State Route 123.

Old Town Fairfax has undergone an extensive redevelopment, which began in 2005. The redevelopment added a new City of Fairfax Regional Library, more than 45,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space, more than 70,000 square feet of office condominiums, and 85 upscale residential condominium units. In May 2009, Fairfax was rated as No. 3 in the "Top 25 Places to Live Well" by Forbes Magazine. Forbes commended Fairfax for its strong public school system, high median salary, and a rate of sole proprietors per capita that ranks it in the top 1 percent nationwide. According to the magazine, "These factors are increasingly important in a recession. When businesses and jobs retract, as they have nationwide, municipalities with strong environments for start-ups, and those that offer attractive amenities, are better suited to recover from economic downtimes, as there are more business activity filling the void."

The city derives its name from Thomas Fairfax, 6th Lord Fairfax of Cameron, who was awarded 5,000,000 acres of land in northern Virginia by King Charles. The area that the city now encompasses was settled in the early 18th century by farmers from Virginia's Tidewater region. The town of "Providence" was established on the site by an act of the state legislature in 1805. Providence was officially renamed the "Town of Fairfax" in 1859. It was incorporated as a town in 1874. It was incorporated as a city almost 100 years later in 1961 by a court order. Under Virginia law, the city was separated from Fairfax County, but the City of Fairfax remains the county seat.

Nearby Cities:

Falls Church VA (8 miles), Springfield VA (8 miles), Herndon VA (10 miles), Manassas VA (11 miles), Arlington VA (12 miles), Woodbridge VA (13 miles), Alexandria VA (14 miles), Bethesda MD (15 miles), Washington DC (15 miles), Ashburn VA (17 miles), Rockville MD (18 miles), Silver Spring MD (18 miles), Gaithersburg MD (21 miles), Hyattsville MD (21 miles), Leesburg VA (23 miles), Bowie MD (30 miles), Laurel MD (30 miles), Upper Marlboro MD (30 miles), Columbia MD (34 miles), Fredericksburg VA (38 miles), Ellicott City MD (40 miles), Frederick MD (40 miles), Annapolis MD (45 miles), Baltimore MD (48 miles)

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