Wasps buzzing your space? At DOA Pest Control, our 31 years of experience make us wasp-whacking experts—our technicians take down nests with precision dusts and sprays. We’re State-licensed, fully insured, and quick to respond, protecting your home with a family-owned touch. Our 100% satisfaction guarantee means we don’t stop until the sting’s gone. Let us handle these aggressive flyers with the skill they demand.
We handle wasps with expertise gained over 31+ years. Our certified technicians start by locating nests—often in eaves, trees, or attics—inspecting your property for activity and nest size. We identify species, like paper wasps or yellowjackets, to adjust our plan. Then, we apply effective treatments, using dusts or aerosol sprays to eliminate wasps and their nests. Dusts penetrate deep into nests, while sprays target flying adults, applied at dusk when wasps are less active. We remove the nest after treatment to prevent rebuilding, sealing entry points like gaps in siding or vents. Our process minimizes disruption, with follow-ups to ensure no return. Backed by our 100% satisfaction guarantee and one-year warranty on select services, we’ll clear your space of wasps with skill and speed.
Wasps can be subtle until they’re not, and we at DOA Pest Control know what to look for. Frequent sightings of wasps near your home, especially hovering around food or trash, signal trouble. A buzzing nest—paper-like and gray—in eaves, sheds, or branches is a dead giveaway. Stings or aggressive behavior near certain spots mean they’re defending territory. Watch for these signs:
Wasps lingering near sweets or garbage
Visible nests in high or hidden places
Buzzing sounds from walls or roofs
Sudden aggression outdoors
If you’re dodging stings or spotting nests, don’t wait—call us to take them down fast.
Wasps are fierce, and our 31+ years at DOA Pest Control have taught us their wild ways. Unlike bees, these predators hunt insects and scavenge meat or sweets, feeding larvae with protein. Social species, like yellowjackets, build nests from chewed wood pulp, housing hundreds in hexagonal cells. Solitary wasps, like mud daubers, paralyze prey for their young. Here’s what’s striking:
Aggressive: They sting repeatedly—unlike bees—and defend nests fiercely.
Seasonal: Colonies peak in late summer, then die off, leaving new queens.
Hunters: They control pests, eating flies and caterpillars.
Architects: Nests grow fast, some reaching basketball size.
Wasps communicate with pheromones, rallying others if threatened. Their bold nature and painful stings make them foes we’re eager to tackle for you!
We handle wasps with expertise gained over 31+ years. Our certified technicians start by locating nests—often in eaves, trees, or attics—inspecting your property for activity and nest size. We identify species, like paper wasps or yellowjackets, to adjust our plan. Then, we apply effective treatments, using dusts or aerosol sprays to eliminate wasps and their nests. Dusts penetrate deep into nests, while sprays target flying adults, applied at dusk when wasps are less active. We remove the nest after treatment to prevent rebuilding, sealing entry points like gaps in siding or vents. Our process minimizes disruption, with follow-ups to ensure no return. Backed by our 100% satisfaction guarantee and one-year warranty on select services, we’ll clear your space of wasps with skill and speed.
Wasps can be subtle until they’re not, and we at DOA Pest Control know what to look for. Frequent sightings of wasps near your home, especially hovering around food or trash, signal trouble. A buzzing nest—paper-like and gray—in eaves, sheds, or branches is a dead giveaway. Stings or aggressive behavior near certain spots mean they’re defending territory. Watch for these signs:
Wasps lingering near sweets or garbage
Visible nests in high or hidden places
Buzzing sounds from walls or roofs
Sudden aggression outdoors
If you’re dodging stings or spotting nests, don’t wait—call us to take them down fast.
Wasps are fierce, and our 31+ years at DOA Pest Control have taught us their wild ways. Unlike bees, these predators hunt insects and scavenge meat or sweets, feeding larvae with protein. Social species, like yellowjackets, build nests from chewed wood pulp, housing hundreds in hexagonal cells. Solitary wasps, like mud daubers, paralyze prey for their young. Here’s what’s striking:
Aggressive: They sting repeatedly—unlike bees—and defend nests fiercely.
Seasonal: Colonies peak in late summer, then die off, leaving new queens.
Hunters: They control pests, eating flies and caterpillars.
Architects: Nests grow fast, some reaching basketball size.
Wasps communicate with pheromones, rallying others if threatened. Their bold nature and painful stings make them foes we’re eager to tackle for you!