Those suits probably offer three to four times the resistance as a regular bee suit. I have a hive of honeybees in my yard, and wear my skimpy suit (compared with the ones in the video, and have never been stung. My glove has, but not my skin.
1000% those hornets are extremely intelligent & will figure out a way to sting you if you give them long enough. I’ve been stung by one of these & it is really painful. It got me right in the bottom knuckle of my thumb & it swelled up to the size of a golf ball. It throbbed for hours & didn’t let up the entire time.
@@deanevangelista6359 I'm gonna go ahead and guess these arent exactly like honey bees, unless they're Africa sized Edit: africanized* but yeah, Africa sized too
A perfect example of "beauty" that contrasts our idea of being something inherently approachable. I've found most beautiful things in nature are usually quite dangerous in fact. However, that just makes the beauties out there all the more compelling. Hats off to these guys with cast iron balls and nerves of steel. I'll climb a tree to get pictures of lighting with no fear, but THIS is a job for them.
Liquid nitrogen would take care of them decently well. So would a flame thrower. Decisions, decisions. Well, as Pat benatar said " fire and ice" use them both. Freeze and fry.
By far the biggest Hornets nest I have seen on You Tube! Wow, the engineering of this colossal housing unit. Insects and animals are just amazing are they not?
What are those suits made out of is it kevlar its got to be something strong quick question why don't they take after these in the night don't they go like different in the evening
Dude swinging the net round and round seemingly aimlessly was hilarious. Cause thats all he really had to do was just nonchalantly swing the net round and round. And look at the ball in the net where all the hornets he caught gathered and made an impression like it was as heavy as a softball. LoL. These folks are heroes!
Its standard for hornet and bee removal. You can not catch all of them at the entrance. there is a skill to it, you have to always keep the opening facing forward. With a nest that big, it would be nice to have some sort of machine do the swinging. There was another guy who had a safer way of doing it. he used a sticky mouse trap, opened it up like a book, and placed one caught hornet on it. The hornet will release distress fermones, and others will come to help, getting stuck, and the more hornets stuck, the stronger the call.
@@ZimCrusher Yeah actually the sticky mouse trap is a staple in Japan to catch these guys. I am a beekeeper and I have been watching these videos for decades now. When I was a young boy here in Florida, I was mudding with my buddies out in the Forrest one day and our truck was riding down an old trail and all of a sudden our truck collapsed where there should have been a friggin road. We found out almost instantly what it was. The very dangerous and prolific southern yellow jacket. Which is a type of subterranean social hornet we got here in the southern United States. They are able to make some record breaking hives and actually have here in Florida. You see when a honey bee colony gets too big, the colony will lay a new queen and the hive with swarm (split once the new queen is born) and then half the hive will fly off in search of a new place to build their hive for their colony. Bee hives can only get so big before they have to do this. It has to do with all the pollen and nectar they need to sustain their colony, so they split to keep things efficient. But hornets are almost strictly meat eaters. yes they do eat pollen and nectar but its few and far between. They rather hunt down other insects and whatnot. But because they have no need for storing pollen or honey, they can just keep making queens and expanding their hive. In one hive in Ocala here in Florida, the southern yellow jacket swallowed an entire VW Bug and when they exterminated it because it was in a hiking area, they found there was something like 200 queens in the hive. So back to my story. We were driving a old 87 Toyota 4x4. But we unlocked our four wheel drive hubs on the front tires once we got back to the road. Which was a mistake because like 5 minutes later our truck falls into a huge pit that had no signs of anything on the outside so our truck just literally collapsed into a hole. The hornets swarmed (in this case swarming means they all attacked a single target) our truck to the point they blocked the sunlight. Imagine what that would be like for three teenagers at 14, 15, and 16. There were three of us in the cab. We were stuck in that truck for over two hours before someone came to find us, called the cops, the EMTs, the fire department (yes they actually brought a fire truck thinking they had to spray the hornets off us. Channel 5 even brought their chopper out and got video of us once we were pulled out cause they couldn’t see us on the road because of the canopy made by the trees. They even called a bee keeper/exterminator that came in just a bee veil and jean pants. He looked at us and looked at the cops and shrugged his shoulders and i saw him mouth “What do you want me to do? I am not prepared for something this violent!” So the EMTs the cops and the firemen all stood like 40 yards away from the truck staring at us and trying to figure out how to rescue the three of us stuck in the cab. Finally, one of the step mothers of a kid who was in there with us showed up. She was an aerobics instructor and she was in a sports bra and those stretchy workout pants. She got pissed and started smacking the cops and firemen screaming at them telling them they aint men! I never saw a mother get so pissed off. And she was only my buddies step mother. It was funny. She then grabbed the nylon snatch strap from the firemen they tried hooking onto us to pull us out but even in their fire suits were no match for the hornets. So what does this woman do? Wearing only skin tight workout clothing she runs into the middle of the swarm and hooks the strap up to our bumper, runs back to her truck and wraps it around her bumper (still getting stung like hundreds of times) and she pulled us out! And get this, when she was done, she looked like someone pelted her with a paintball gun all damn day or something. I was 15 then, im 41 now. And i will never forget it. The only people who didn’t get stung that day was the three of us in the truck. Everyone else got stung. That traumatized me for a good many years. I was terrified of flying stinking insects after that. Even bees. Till one day my father told me that to get over a fear of something, you must learn more about it. For most of our fears are routed into things we don’t know about or understand. So I became a beekeeper and never looked back.. Now i assist in removals of hornets and do live removals of bees. I watch videos like this all the time and one of the main ways Japanese folks catch hornets that are stalking their hives is to put down that sticky mouse trap book. Then once a hornet gets caught, they immediately release emergency pheromones that draw other hornets there to help. They will land to try and help out their buddy and get stuck too. Then those hornets will release the same pheromone a draw other hornets to the same place and the cycle repeats until the hunting party of hornets is destroyed. Sometimes they catch one or two of them and hook flags up to them like this video did and track them back to their hives so they can destroy them.
WOW! WOW! Great video and thx for sharing. I can only imagine the damage/destruction these wasp must have done to build such a nest. Thank you for eliminating them.
I know a faster and safer way to deal with a nest that large. It is called a flamethrower. And have 3 more on standby, just in case you need more heat.
What’s interesting to me is how un-swarm-like the hornets’ reaction was to the hive breach. Maybe it’s because the hornets are so large they look slow as compared to other hornets but it just looked like they were just flying around with a few attacking the two workers. I was expecting the two workers to be covered head to toe in hornets trying to sting them. Just a casual observation.
I was thinking the same thing. Maybe it's how the hornets and wasps operate in the US. Here you mess with the hive you better get ready for a shirt made of wasps. He's to be something based on the species of wasps / hornet. It's also possible they calmed them down off camera with some kind of spray or smoke. Idk. Still, what a wild video!
@@SkrtskrtscootI'm almost positive they did something beforehand to quell the nest. The Asian giant hornet *does* swarm, and it's far more aggressive about it than anything we have in the US.
I am Chinese, and I have a protective suit like this. It happened that a sting was stuck on the suit, and when I took off the suit, I was accidentally stung by the sting left on the outside of the suit. Anyway, the suit is still very safe.
The Chinese sub-titles of the video suggest that those people were harvesting instead of removing the nest. I looked up the internet and found that hornet larvae are considered a delicacy in some parts of China.
@@homemadechicken8995 well if you think about how these gonna make nest in your attic then better setup something to lure them there. Keep their numbers in check
I know this is a month old. Do the farmers try to irratcate these winged demons?? I know they are a delicacy to them ,but they are so destructive to the honey bees who are of more importance.
Id be wearing one of those old heavy rubber commercial diving suits with the brass helmet, lead boots and umbilical supplied air to breathe lol no way im taking on those suckers in any other suit.
those things have like 1/4 in long giant stingers how do those suite protect from that what are they made of ? no normal bee suit works on stingers that long
Prob they nubed them, whit smoke or other things... Usually for bees and smaller wasps works...smoke make them idiots.. But not defenseless... Specially if u mess whit those bad bitches here..
It's mostly the honey bees that they murder. Since pesticides have lowered the honey bee populations around the world the Murder hornets need to also be controlled. And definately not allowed to become established in non native habitats.
That's not actually what they are called. They are not out to murder people, that's just a bloody stupid name the press coined and people should ignore it because it's false and stupid.
Asian honeybees know how to defend against these so it isn't as bad as you think, what will be horrible is if they establish in Europe or the Americas as the bees imported there don't have the capacity to fight the hornets
Not just bees - Asian Hornets actually do a decent job of keeping many other insect species in check. Asian farmers are actually tolerant of these guys for that reason.
What did they do with these now how do they exterminate them curious anybody let me know that would be great thank you have a great day God bless you all better you than me highly allergic to bee stings this would not be a good thing for me LOL😊
Looks like the hornets will have the opportunity to move on to making more nests, right? Maybe or maybe not given; I can't read the onscreen text. What happens to the nest in the bag?😊
Looks like someone built the perfect structure, and in they went...and multiplied...! Wonder how many times the technicians were stung? Gear protected them, but the hornets had to be riled beyond sanity! What happens to the giant nest now? What do they do with it?
Seems crazy, you guys have like 100s or more videos of vespa mandarinia nest removal and i have seen other japanese bee keepers videos where their bee nests are constantly attacked by these monsters. How much are those beasts spread in Japan? Looks scary to me! Aren't you guys worried they will get rid of all bees and other kinds of vespas and become the predominant and even only wasp specie ?
This is a giant hornet farm in China. They catch hornets from the wild and put them in a wooden box for them to build nests. When the nests reach a certain size, they come to harvest.
@@hal64738 Both hornets and the nests are materials for making traditional Chinese medicine , the nest (with pupas) worth about $40 a kilo in my hometown, it's a good income for local farmers
Ironically the native japanese bees can deal with the hornets by a bizarre method where they cover the hornets with their own bodies and then create so much friction they cook the hornet alive. Look it up. You won't believe it til you see it. The european honey bees are the ones who have entire hives wiped out by a handful of hornets.
Me: What an incredible nest! A true masterpiece of natural architecture! (Lights flame thrower)
yum, roasted grubs!
Burn in hell!!!!
Lol, well said!
😂😂 my thoughts exactly!
Nothing a few gallons of methylethylketone and a match couldn't fix.
"Nuke it from orbit, its the only way to be sure". If it's good enough for Ripley then this is definitely the time.
Ha! Yup!
Lol good one.
A generous mix of Raid and napalm might work..?
They can bill me
@mrbellthebutler: ABSOLUTELY!!!🐝🐝🐝
Hornets aside, that nest was a beautiful piece of architecture and engineering.
I agree. Amazing the size of that thing. Should be preserved and put in a nature museum.
Yeah, it was perfect, amazing.
Almost a shame to destroy it!
They look like huge chocolate cake rolls
doesn't really 'ask' to be destroyed.. but, with pest control 'business', there must always b an excuse..
You have put together such a beautiful home, all it needs is a few gallons of gas and a match.
My sediments exactly. I was going to suggest a flame thrower for those things.
That's barbaric! Charcoal starter fluid is safer and burns longer.
Лучше бы это была пчелиная пасека. Столько мёда можно было бы собрать. 🍯
@@ВиталийАвтономов-ъ5еthey don't produce honey that is the honey Bee that does that definitely not a giant Asian hornets nest
You guys are pathetic. I wanna make an epoxy table top with that.
That wasn't a nest, that was an entire country.
@@rustic-haven : The reason nukes were invented.
No tha was an empire.
Bro your correct
@@dougretter🤣🤣🤣
Sure does
Im gonna be honest I don’t care if these guys specifically go extinct. The Japanese giant hornets are terrible.
Hornetsly I agree
What kind hornet ?
And mosquitoes! I know male mosquitoes don’t drink blood, but if you get rid of females males will die anyway
@@tomsellersjr2170 they kill native bee species and even go as far as destroy insects in ecosystems
@@tomsellersjr2170 horny variant
There's no way in the world I'd trust that netting over their nest, without also wearing the most foolproof safety suit on the planet.
Those suits probably offer three to four times the resistance as a regular bee suit. I have a hive of honeybees in my yard, and wear my skimpy suit (compared with the ones in the video, and have never been stung. My glove has, but not my skin.
I would also use an insecticide
1000% those hornets are extremely intelligent & will figure out a way to sting you if you give them long enough. I’ve been stung by one of these & it is really painful. It got me right in the bottom knuckle of my thumb & it swelled up to the size of a golf ball. It throbbed for hours & didn’t let up the entire time.
@@deanevangelista6359 I'm gonna go ahead and guess these arent exactly like honey bees, unless they're Africa sized
Edit: africanized* but yeah, Africa sized too
NIFO
Only way to be sure.
I kept watching thinking: "Ok, cool. Now they're going to burn it down, right?"
As someone who has been stung by a Japanese giant hornet, you are doing the lords work
No doubt, but I think they’re being bred.
@@ironhell813 I think you might be right about the Hornets being bred as I have heard that the larvae are a delicacy to some of the Asian people.
Asians will eat anything.@@mickm7786
On a scale of 1 to 10, how painful was the sting?
@@david5132-t2uMy guess is "8". At least 8.
Was that built on purpose so they could be harvested for the larvae to eat?
Yes it was.
yes they pound the larvae, dry it and snort it!! lolol
It almost looks like this is a bait box designed for to lure the hornets. Great idea honestly.
Absolutely great idea! I def looked like it was prebuilt with extraction in mind.
I was thinking same thing since I saw a watering jug for them on top of the box the nest was built into
That's one big sound system
That has to be the Biggest comb ever found😳
if thats a comb then consider me bald
it's not small, no, no, no
More like ever made?
The correct term is 'mahooosive'.
Naw I've seen bigger Ines out there
A perfect example of "beauty" that contrasts our idea of being something inherently approachable. I've found most beautiful things in nature are usually quite dangerous in fact. However, that just makes the beauties out there all the more compelling. Hats off to these guys with cast iron balls and nerves of steel. I'll climb a tree to get pictures of lighting with no fear, but THIS is a job for them.
agree 100%
@@jamesmackenzie3262I will never understand why people like you make comments like that🙄
@@jamesmackenzie3262for sure bro you go out the and diddle a nest the size of a 1992 Honda civic.
I've found that the most beautiful things in nature are usually not dangerous in fact. In fact, it's a matter of opinion. not fact.
What do we do with the nest? We chuck in the neighbors yard ofc
The "Death Star" of Murder Hornets.
Ahahahahahahahahahaha facts
Liquid nitrogen would take care of them decently well. So would a flame thrower. Decisions, decisions. Well, as Pat benatar said " fire and ice" use them both. Freeze and fry.
is that a hornet farm? because it sure looks like that box was made just for that. is there some kind of chemical they get from them?
That things so big it’s bigger than a Ford Fiesta.
But still smaller than Dodge Hornet.
Where is and how big is the queen ?
That’s the biggest murder hornets nest I’ve ever seen.
Imagine the amount of bees those fuckers murdered
yet!
Just call it the Asian giant hornet, for fucks sakes. That's like calling bird eggs "prebirds."
Ive seen worse..
@@NateCraven318 so? Why so mad?
I don't think they're exterminating them. This looks like a harvesting operation.
Похоже на то, что их их собирают для продажи за большие деньги.
I think you’re right. They eat the larvae. They don’t kill the hornets.
@@watrgrl2 Yeah they are farmed and harvested, for food and medicine.
What a massive hive!! These things can be 2"long but just an incredible hive! Wonder how long they were there.
2 words - FLAME THROWER
1 word- Dangerous
@@EperogiLimousine 2 words - fucking awesome
@@narconyx7 words- loss of human life due to fire
@@EperogiLimousine but imagine how fucking sick that would look
@@narconyx eh I guess
By far the biggest Hornets nest I have seen on You Tube! Wow, the engineering of this colossal housing unit. Insects and animals are just amazing are they not?
Looks like a DJ's hub. Incredible!
What are those suits made out of is it kevlar its got to be something strong quick question why don't they take after these in the night don't they go like different in the evening
Dude swinging the net round and round seemingly aimlessly was hilarious. Cause thats all he really had to do was just nonchalantly swing the net round and round. And look at the ball in the net where all the hornets he caught gathered and made an impression like it was as heavy as a softball. LoL. These folks are heroes!
He was gathering them up for processing to make Sport Drinks . Believe it or not !
@@rayinpau.s.a.6351 BAAAAAAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAA! Giant hornet sports drink sounds like a winner.
Its standard for hornet and bee removal. You can not catch all of them at the entrance.
there is a skill to it, you have to always keep the opening facing forward.
With a nest that big, it would be nice to have some sort of machine do the swinging.
There was another guy who had a safer way of doing it. he used a sticky mouse trap, opened it up like a book, and placed one caught hornet on it. The hornet will release distress fermones, and others will come to help, getting stuck, and the more hornets stuck, the stronger the call.
@@ZimCrusher Yeah actually the sticky mouse trap is a staple in Japan to catch these guys. I am a beekeeper and I have been watching these videos for decades now. When I was a young boy here in Florida, I was mudding with my buddies out in the Forrest one day and our truck was riding down an old trail and all of a sudden our truck collapsed where there should have been a friggin road. We found out almost instantly what it was. The very dangerous and prolific southern yellow jacket. Which is a type of subterranean social hornet we got here in the southern United States. They are able to make some record breaking hives and actually have here in Florida. You see when a honey bee colony gets too big, the colony will lay a new queen and the hive with swarm (split once the new queen is born) and then half the hive will fly off in search of a new place to build their hive for their colony. Bee hives can only get so big before they have to do this. It has to do with all the pollen and nectar they need to sustain their colony, so they split to keep things efficient. But hornets are almost strictly meat eaters. yes they do eat pollen and nectar but its few and far between. They rather hunt down other insects and whatnot. But because they have no need for storing pollen or honey, they can just keep making queens and expanding their hive. In one hive in Ocala here in Florida, the southern yellow jacket swallowed an entire VW Bug and when they exterminated it because it was in a hiking area, they found there was something like 200 queens in the hive. So back to my story. We were driving a old 87 Toyota 4x4. But we unlocked our four wheel drive hubs on the front tires once we got back to the road. Which was a mistake because like 5 minutes later our truck falls into a huge pit that had no signs of anything on the outside so our truck just literally collapsed into a hole. The hornets swarmed (in this case swarming means they all attacked a single target) our truck to the point they blocked the sunlight. Imagine what that would be like for three teenagers at 14, 15, and 16. There were three of us in the cab. We were stuck in that truck for over two hours before someone came to find us, called the cops, the EMTs, the fire department (yes they actually brought a fire truck thinking they had to spray the hornets off us. Channel 5 even brought their chopper out and got video of us once we were pulled out cause they couldn’t see us on the road because of the canopy made by the trees. They even called a bee keeper/exterminator that came in just a bee veil and jean pants. He looked at us and looked at the cops and shrugged his shoulders and i saw him mouth “What do you want me to do? I am not prepared for something this violent!” So the EMTs the cops and the firemen all stood like 40 yards away from the truck staring at us and trying to figure out how to rescue the three of us stuck in the cab. Finally, one of the step mothers of a kid who was in there with us showed up. She was an aerobics instructor and she was in a sports bra and those stretchy workout pants. She got pissed and started smacking the cops and firemen screaming at them telling them they aint men! I never saw a mother get so pissed off. And she was only my buddies step mother. It was funny. She then grabbed the nylon snatch strap from the firemen they tried hooking onto us to pull us out but even in their fire suits were no match for the hornets. So what does this woman do? Wearing only skin tight workout clothing she runs into the middle of the swarm and hooks the strap up to our bumper, runs back to her truck and wraps it around her bumper (still getting stung like hundreds of times) and she pulled us out! And get this, when she was done, she looked like someone pelted her with a paintball gun all damn day or something. I was 15 then, im 41 now. And i will never forget it. The only people who didn’t get stung that day was the three of us in the truck. Everyone else got stung. That traumatized me for a good many years. I was terrified of flying stinking insects after that. Even bees. Till one day my father told me that to get over a fear of something, you must learn more about it. For most of our fears are routed into things we don’t know about or understand. So I became a beekeeper and never looked back.. Now i assist in removals of hornets and do live removals of bees. I watch videos like this all the time and one of the main ways Japanese folks catch hornets that are stalking their hives is to put down that sticky mouse trap book. Then once a hornet gets caught, they immediately release emergency pheromones that draw other hornets there to help. They will land to try and help out their buddy and get stuck too. Then those hornets will release the same pheromone a draw other hornets to the same place and the cycle repeats until the hunting party of hornets is destroyed. Sometimes they catch one or two of them and hook flags up to them like this video did and track them back to their hives so they can destroy them.
What was the purpose of netting and salvaging the nest?
Eating the larvae.
WOW! WOW! Great video and thx for sharing. I can only imagine the damage/destruction these wasp must have done to build such a nest. Thank you for eliminating them.
It's the new york of the hornets
So…. What does one DO with this nest? Other than burn it?
Why do i feel like they’re in my room now
Bro it looks like I just saw one in my peripheral vision
U be in trouble if they were
Just your room? I feel like they're in my hair now!
What is the PPE made out of?
yeah I want those gloves
I know a faster and safer way to deal with a nest that large.
It is called a flamethrower.
And have 3 more on standby, just in case you need more heat.
Permethrin & Piperonyl butoxide will do the trick without open fire ....
@@system64738 Do we want that floating around in the air and into the soil?
@@stelmarsky6778 It's chrysanthemum oil. All natural.
The flamethrower is so much more satisfying though! 😂
Someone said that they are harvesting to make traditional medicine.
Battery powered vacuums. That’s what these guys need. Industrial sized shop vacs.
Эти парни настоящие герои!!!😮
That’s going to feed a lot of chickens!🐓
Good job guys👍!
Dobrý den.
Kolik může takto velké hnízdo obsahoval sršni????
How did you dispose of the nests afterwards ?
Throw it in a lake
eat it
Someone from there mentioned that this is an artificially created breeding ground. After that, they sell it well and make medicines.
Fire.
Stir fry
Why keep them? Did someone start a rumor that they make your ween bigger like gorilla hands and rhino horn?
you know its bad when you have to wear a full on hazmat suit to remove bugs
If there were actual Gundam mechs, this is the kind of shit they'd be deployed for.
How long it will take to make size???1year or two??
That’s a massive hornets nest. It looks like they’ve been building on it for a decade or more.
How many colony did you put together in the begining
Do they purposely breed them to harvest the larvae?
What’s interesting to me is how un-swarm-like the hornets’ reaction was to the hive breach. Maybe it’s because the hornets are so large they look slow as compared to other hornets but it just looked like they were just flying around with a few attacking the two workers. I was expecting the two workers to be covered head to toe in hornets trying to sting them. Just a casual observation.
I was thinking the same thing. Maybe it's how the hornets and wasps operate in the US. Here you mess with the hive you better get ready for a shirt made of wasps. He's to be something based on the species of wasps / hornet. It's also possible they calmed them down off camera with some kind of spray or smoke. Idk. Still, what a wild video!
@@SkrtskrtscootI'm almost positive they did something beforehand to quell the nest. The Asian giant hornet *does* swarm, and it's far more aggressive about it than anything we have in the US.
@@tek512 Maybe they smoked it first to calm them a bit, like they do with bee hives?
To me they swarmed pretty good but they didn’t attack?? I know these hornets are NASTY but this hive behaved so calmly compared to yellowjackets ?? :O
question, do the suits always protect from stings or is theer a small chance thier stingers getr through ?
I am Chinese, and I have a protective suit like this. It happened that a sting was stuck on the suit, and when I took off the suit, I was accidentally stung by the sting left on the outside of the suit. Anyway, the suit is still very safe.
@@KuCoXi thank you for the information 🙏
The Chinese sub-titles of the video suggest that those people were harvesting instead of removing the nest. I looked up the internet and found that hornet larvae are considered a delicacy in some parts of China.
I suspected as much. That’s why there were no closed captions available. As usual, disgusting.
Of course it is.
Everything is bigger in Texas, but it's MUCH more bigger in China.
That nest is really huge. Definitely The biggest I’ve ever seen
lol, who sold them the lumbar for that structure? how'd they use the tools?
"Nuke the site from orbit, - just to be sure".
So what do they do with them?
They farm it lol,, in few place in south East Asia those larva has a high price
Ikr looks like a fkin farm, like they put that there to make a nest. Crazy to think they would actually do such a thing
@@homemadechicken8995 well if you think about how these gonna make nest in your attic then better setup something to lure them there. Keep their numbers in check
Why did they collect so many in those mesh cylinders? Why did they bag the nest and leave them all alive? What is going on here?
Complete madness of course, but interesting that they are not going absolutely mental. They seem as if they are on weed and chilled out
Yeah, no. That’s because they are so big they look like they are slow. it’s actually creepier looking
How can i buy your suite. Would you please share me the link to buy the type of suite you are wearing.
I work on a Japanese farm as a part time job and today, those murder hornets are giving me hell, haven't been stung yet... Fingers crossed!!!
Good luck, prayers for you!! 🙏🏻
@@Intrepid_Insomniac Thanks. They truly are nasty little creatures...
Yeah, if I had been in your place, I would have noped the hell out of there. If it flies and has a stinger on its ass, I want nothing to do with it.
I know this is a month old. Do the farmers try to irratcate these winged demons?? I know they are a delicacy to them ,but they are so destructive to the honey bees who are of more importance.
If you haven’t been stung, then what’s the issue?
What is that that the nest is in? Was this colony started on purpose??
O kurwa!!! 😮 Jakie ogromne!!! 😮 👍🏼
Can you please tell me how to rear during winter?
Id be wearing one of those old heavy rubber commercial diving suits with the brass helmet, lead boots and umbilical supplied air to breathe lol no way im taking on those suckers in any other suit.
Looks like they are farming or breeding them. For what purpose ???
You’re gonna need a few cans of raid to squash these beasts
use 3 fire balls bundled from rattan sacks with diesel to burn them. No mercy
those things have like 1/4 in long giant stingers how do those suite protect from that what are they made of ? no normal bee suit works on stingers that long
It is impressive to see what a hive mind can accomplish. However, I'll stick to my individualism and own creative mind thank you.
I agree.
They are capturing to move them where?
They don't appear to be aggressively attacking the people removing the nest...perhaps they are not Vespa Mandarinia?
They swarmed him and I saw some going for his face. I assume they are but I could be wrong.
Il s'agit d'élevage de vespa soror !
Prob they nubed them, whit smoke or other things... Usually for bees and smaller wasps works...smoke make them idiots.. But not defenseless... Specially if u mess whit those bad bitches here..
they where
Idk what everyone in the comments are smoking, these guys were swarming, they just look slow because they're big
Sooo, what’d they do with it?
My God this is like something out of a John Carpenter movie
They don't seem aggressive here.. Are they usually this docile?
I'm shivering just LOOKING at that monstrosity...
Did they vacant the city before doing this?
They're more docile than i expected something named "murder hornet" to be
MSM Hype
@wasntme7845 seems it would only make me want to commit murder on them
It's mostly the honey bees that they murder. Since pesticides have lowered the honey bee populations around the world the Murder hornets need to also be controlled. And definately not allowed to become established in non native habitats.
That's not actually what they are called. They are not out to murder people, that's just a bloody stupid name the press coined and people should ignore it because it's false and stupid.
Where did you get that suit please
This would be a perfect candidate for Molotov cocktail.
Seemed to be a lot of unnecessary steps involved... mught i recommend simplifying it with the following method:
Step 1, call in airstrike...
They sell the larva from these nests to high end luxury restaurants in China. Its expensive a for a little bowl of larva there
1:40 Bro has the most efficient hornet netting technique
With style I must say
What was the box put there for ?
The size of that nest is absolutely terrifying. It's like a bathtub of bees
Would’ve been easier to pour the gas on and light it
And risk burning down a neighborhood and charged for arson?
@@EperogiLimousine I mean that'd look fuckin cool tho
@@EperogiLimousine If that's what it takes
@@EperogiLimousinea small price to pay
Yup
Those blokes are braver than me!
What do they do with it after they extract it with all the hornets on it?
Does anybody know what that structure was supposed to be? Almost looked like a giant honey bee hive with racks for honey combs that got taken over.
yes its like a bee hive but set out horizontally, the hornets made it be chowing up wood which then turns into pulp, then they build the nest with it.
So, when do we break out the napalm for this nest?
I'm sure the suit is reliable. I just wouldn't trust my dumb ass to put it on correctly.
The ones in those cylinders are heading for the US?????
How many honeybee colonies have these monsters destroyed to reach to this level!!😢😢
Asian honeybees know how to defend against these so it isn't as bad as you think, what will be horrible is if they establish in Europe or the Americas as the bees imported there don't have the capacity to fight the hornets
Not just bees - Asian Hornets actually do a decent job of keeping many other insect species in check. Asian farmers are actually tolerant of these guys for that reason.
@@godozo Well, despite that fact I do not want them in my neighborhood at all!
What did they do with these now how do they exterminate them curious anybody let me know that would be great thank you have a great day God bless you all better you than me highly allergic to bee stings this would not be a good thing for me LOL😊
I’m shocked these guys didn’t spray poison or toxic powder or smoke into the hive before rippling into it, that is one big comb
No poison used because they're going to eat the larvae.
That would contaminate the harvest.
Looks like the hornets will have the opportunity to move on to making more nests, right? Maybe or maybe not given; I can't read the onscreen text.
What happens to the nest in the bag?😊
Could you imagine stumbling upon this when out for a hike😢
Please don’t make me do that🥵
how do you not approach that with a flame thrower going full throttle?
Looks like someone built the perfect structure, and in they went...and multiplied...!
Wonder how many times the technicians were stung? Gear protected them, but the hornets had to be riled beyond sanity!
What happens to the giant nest now? What do they do with it?
Not sure why they destroyed it?
The nest with the net over it looks like a forbidden mattress
Seems crazy, you guys have like 100s or more videos of vespa mandarinia nest removal and i have seen other japanese bee keepers videos where their bee nests are constantly attacked by these monsters. How much are those beasts spread in Japan? Looks scary to me! Aren't you guys worried they will get rid of all bees and other kinds of vespas and become the predominant and even only wasp specie ?
This is a giant hornet farm in China. They catch hornets from the wild and put them in a wooden box for them to build nests. When the nests reach a certain size, they come to harvest.
@@KuCoXi Thanks. And what they do with the catched hornets? I mean, i don't think they are selling queens like bees, so why growing them ?
@@hal64738 Both hornets and the nests are materials for making traditional Chinese medicine , the nest (with pupas) worth about $40 a kilo in my hometown, it's a good income for local farmers
@@KuCoXiOut of interest, what are the medicines made from wasp pupa used for?
Ironically the native japanese bees can deal with the hornets by a bizarre method where they cover the hornets with their own bodies and then create so much friction they cook the hornet alive.
Look it up. You won't believe it til you see it.
The european honey bees are the ones who have entire hives wiped out by a handful of hornets.
ready for shipment to the USA
Yeah I don't think so buddy nottttt No freaking way 🥺 don't I'll die
They need Mr Miyagi with his chopsticks!!