Wasps invade Huntington Beach home
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Kenneth Ma
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- What Melanie Petersen thought was a minor
inconvenience while she was cooking dinner Sunday afternoon turned out to
be a deadly nest of 15,000 adult paper wasps and their eggs hovering
above her home.
Petersen, her husband, Mark, four of their children and two guests
were preparing for dinner in the Jardines Drive home when up to 30 wasps
appeared out of a small hole in the living room ceiling.
“It was just kind of creepy that they could be in the roof so long,”
Petersen said.Krin Petersen, 7, said he soon saw the insects everywhere.
“They were all over the window, and they just kept coming out,” he
said.
Before the ordeal ended, the Bee Emergency Response Team, a private
company that serves Southern California, exterminated the hive. Sam
Bonderov, the company’s executive vice president, said the hive’s
extermination was critical because the wasps carry lethal venom in their
sting that is potentially fatal.
Bonderov said the city has experienced a plethora of incidents
involving bee and wasp infestation over the summer. Because of the many
calls in Surf City, Bonderov said the company had to set up a branch
office in the area.
However, Councilwoman Shirley Dettloff said the Petersen case is an
isolated incident and that there isn’t a large problem with bee and wasp
infestation in Huntington Beach.
“To residents who have allergic reactions to bee stings, this is an
important issue,” she said.
For the Petersen family, the insects wreaked havoc on them before the
exterminators arrived.
Petersen said her first response was to seal the ceiling crack with
tape while her husband went to the store to buy insect spray. The paper
wasps, however, quickly chewed through it.
She then tried to contain the insects by using cardboard to seal off
the crack. This resulted in her daughter, Tanya, getting stung three
times on the arm and her friend, Tammy Thompson, getting stung on her
face.
Meanwhile, up to 50 wasps flew into the living room, she said.
After two failed attempts, the family finally called 911 to report the unruly insects. The city’s emergency authorities called the Bee Emergency
Response Team.
The family and guests waited in the frontyard until the wasp
exterminators arrived.
Bonderov said he found a hive of 15,000 adult wasps and their eggs
when he arrived on the scene. Using a specialized pesticide, he removed
the nest, which is described as the size of a half-gallon bucket.
“It was fortunate that [the incident] happened when it did because
there would have been many more wasps in,” the house, he said.
Based on the amount of damage to the ceiling, which was on the brink
of caving in, and the size of the hive, Bonderov said the hive may have
been there for up to four months.
He said the wasps entered the ceiling through an exterior crack and
ventilation shaft in front of the house.
Bonderov said wasp stings can cause paralysis, headaches, redness,
blotching, itchiness and even death in some cases, depending on the
individual.
But for Tanya, 15, the stings were not serious, and the pain
dissipated after about a half-hour. Tammy suffered swelling on her face.
No one who was stung in the incident sought medical attention.
Despite going through the stressful ordeal, Petersen said she was just
glad to have the situation resolved, and that the wasps and the
pesticides did not ruin dinner.
The family will have to dish out $275 for the exterminator, while
damage to the ceiling is still being determined.
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