Gorilla glue spray adhesive vs huge hornet nest amazing results must see!!

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Published 2023-09-02
In this video wasp hunter does a viewer request and treats a massive bald face hornet nest with gorilla glue spray adhesive. The results were absolutely mind blowing this is a must see video for sure. Please remember to like and subscribe as it helps keep my videos going stay tuned for more wasp and hornet nest removal videos lots to still come from this season.

All Comments (21)
  • @lexfox2597
    Imagine walking outside enjoying a nice afternoon when a hornet out of nowhere flies onto you and gets glued to the side of your neck.
  • Had a neighbor that was basically nuts, he found a huge nest in a tree on the back of his land. He went out and sprayed varnish all over it, let it dry, and did it again several times until he finally cut it down, put it in an air tight box, for a year. Later he donated it to the high school for study, they cut it in half to show the interior.
  • @koonley
    Your whistling, humming and singing adds a whole different level of macabre to this video!!! 💀💀💀
  • @danny-li6io
    Finally a YouTube video where the commentary is NOT painfully annoying, but rather highly entertaining!
  • @seanrrr
    3:25 Damn that's brutal. Imagine being stuck, struggling to get free, and your friend starts panicking and tries to gnaw off your neck and arm..
  • @AMaidenlessRunt
    You learn something new everyday. The wasp were really determined to get out to the point they started eating each other to escape.
  • @DoubleCrossChaos
    wherever you are in this video, it sounds like my childhood. kids laughing without a care in the world, the airplane flying overhead, the crickets and birds. everything. even the lighting and stuff, it makes it seem like an exact replica of my childhood and i love it
  • @iamionscat9035
    Chemist here. Occasionally we get wasps in the chem lab and we treat it like chemists would. We shoot them with solvent we keep in squeezy bottles for working in the lab. We try to shoot them out of the air and make a game out of it. Dichloromethane dissolves their wings nearly instantly (also not flammable) and kills them Ethanol (pure) and Methanol work great too Isopropanol (rubbing alcohol) probably works great too and it's available for home use. Gotta love the effects of solvent on wasps.
  • @kentmagruder390
    You should try spray foam in a can. Stick the long tube in the opening and spray. It is VERY sticky and then expands like crazy.
  • @frombus8679
    It is so satisfying to watch someone who is both excellent at their job and truly enjoys it.
  • @LoneWOLF-ku7mf
    can't believe people let a nest get that big without doing something sooner.
  • @Plowguitarist
    One year they built a nest on a window at my house, bigger than that one. You could see the enter workings of the nest. It was incredible to see how hard they worked and the order they came in and out of the nest. We didn’t tear it down until winter came and they all moved out. But FYI, our had 2 entrances. 1 main entrance and 1 toward the rear. The nest against the glass was all open, you could see many different chambers, you could see the queen laying eggs and the workers covering them. We watched new ones being born, it was amazing the enter workings of a massive nest.
  • @sheilayvonne6131
    Husband was stung by a bald-faced hornet on the top of his head about a month ago. We have fruit trees in our yard. The hornets love the peaches and pears that fall to the ground. He bent over to pick up a pear and that’s when the hornet stung him on top of the head. He had anaphylaxis, went to hospital, took 4 epinephrine treatments plus steroids to get it under control. He now carries an epi pen. We searched for the nest, but never found it.
  • @lancer525
    Dude, as someone who has a nearly-lethal allergy to these little bastards, I appreciate more than you can know, your clear and obvious glee at their sticky destruction. Bravo!
  • @jtsleight1
    I love this guy he’s the funny rated R version of hornet king 😂😂😂
  • @MidnightAspec
    OMG! The commentary has me in stitches. 😂😂😂😂
  • @sgt.snorkel1415
    What most people don't know is that typical Wasp and Hornet spray contains very little active pesticide ingredients. Most of them depend on highly volatile chemicals such as methylene chloride or tri-chloroethane which have a very low boiling point. A wasp's normal body temperature is around 106 to 108 degrees and the chemical evaporates very fast and causes a cooling effect. The wasp dies from the drastically reduced body temperature.
  • @jandoinc
    Those are Bald Head Hornets and they can be dangerous. Glad you are in full gear to handle them. Thanks for sharing.
  • @ganymede3141
    The calm narration makes this that much more enjoyable to watch.