Local pest control across Sacramento County & Placer County Call (279) 245-2382
Citrus HeightsPest Control Pros (279) 245-2382Call or text
Late-summer stingers

Wasp & Hornet Control in Citrus Heights, CA

Yellowjackets get bold and aggressive in the Sacramento Valley's late-summer heat. A local pro removes the nest and treats the eaves and voids where they build.

Call (279) 245-2382
Yellowjacket wasp, an aggressive late-summer stinging insect in the Sacramento Valley

Wasp and hornet control in Citrus Heights, CA is a summer-into-fall problem, because that is when Sacramento Valley colonies peak and turn aggressive. The western yellowjacket is the one that ruins a backyard: it nests in old rodent burrows and ground cavities, in wall voids, and under decks, and by late summer a mature colony sends out hundreds of workers that swarm patios, trash cans, pet food, and anything sweet. Paper wasps build their open, umbrella-shaped combs under eaves, in patio covers, and in gable vents, and mud daubers plaster their tubes on stucco and in garages. Yellowjacket stings hurt, the insects can sting repeatedly, and for anyone with an allergy they are a real hazard. Knocking a nest down without treating it just relocates an angry colony, which is why an experienced local exterminator treats and removes the nest and then handles the spots where wasps keep rebuilding.

Why late summer is the worst

A yellowjacket colony starts small in spring and grows all season, so the nest you barely noticed in June is a large, defensive colony by August and September. As natural food gets scarce in the dry late-summer heat, the workers turn to scavenging, which is why they suddenly crowd around barbecues, soda cans, garbage, and pet bowls and get aggressive when people are near.

Ground-nesting yellowjackets are easy to disturb with a lawn mower or foot traffic, and wall-void colonies can chew through into living space. Both are situations where do-it-yourself sprays often provoke the colony without reaching the nest.

Seeing this at your place?

Call and describe it. We'll match you with a provider covering your Citrus Heights address.

(279) 245-2382

Knowing what you are dealing with

Yellowjackets are short, stocky, and bright yellow and black, and they fly in and out of a single ground hole or wall gap in a steady stream. Paper wasps are longer and thinner with dangling legs and build an exposed, honeycomb-looking nest under eaves and in vents. Mud daubers are solitary and build mud tubes but rarely sting. Telling them apart matters, because the treatment and the risk are different.

A steady stream of wasps disappearing into a hole in the lawn, a wall, or a vent means a hidden nest, and that is the situation to leave to a professional rather than plugging the hole, which only forces the colony to find another way out, sometimes into the house.

How treatment works

The exterminator locates the nest and treats it directly, whether it is a ground nest, a wall void, or an exposed comb under the eaves, then removes accessible nests once the colony is down. Eaves, patio covers, gable vents, and other favored building spots get a residual treatment so new queens are discouraged from rebuilding in the same place.

Prevention follows: keep trash and recycling sealed, clean up fallen fruit and pet food, screen vents and seal wall gaps, and knock down new spring paper-wasp starts before they grow. Catching colonies early in the season is far easier than dealing with a peak-summer nest.

FAQ

Wasp & Hornet Control questions

Why are yellowjackets suddenly everywhere in late summer?

A colony grows all season and peaks in the late-summer heat, and as natural food dries up the workers scavenge around barbecues, trash, and pet food and turn aggressive. By August and September a Citrus Heights nest can hold hundreds of workers, which is why they seem to appear all at once.

There are wasps going into a hole in my yard or wall. What do I do?

A steady stream of wasps into a ground hole, wall gap, or vent means a hidden nest, usually yellowjackets. Don't plug the hole, which forces the colony to find another exit, sometimes into the house. A local pro treats the nest directly and then removes or seals it safely.

Can you keep wasps from coming back to my eaves?

Yes. After treating and removing the nest, a residual treatment on the eaves, vents, and patio covers discourages new queens from rebuilding in the same spots, and knocking down early-spring paper-wasp starts keeps colonies from growing large later in the season.

Ready to deal with wasp & hornet control?

Tell us what you're seeing and get a treatment plan built for your property and the Sacramento Valley seasons. Call now and describe what's showing up.

Serving Citrus Heights, Orangevale, Fair Oaks, Antelope, Carmichael, North Highlands & Roseville.

Call (279) 245-2382