@@UA-camReviewsAndTutorialsMy Asian is a little rusty but I can roughly translate....."Wu sho ting eu wy to la, san sun chin chi cho wa lai, ceen di ho lan"...But that's just a rough translation.
Actually that record is held by a grandmother and granddaughter who rushed to help a man being attacked by killer bees while the paramedics stood by because it was too dangerous for them and the grandmother knew she was allergic to bee stings on top of everything! That poor man didnt make unfortunately 😢
And they sent a whole team of people to WA State to take out one nest and this guy does it alone with a pick, a couple of plastic juice bottles and another smaller jar to catch the stragglers lol. Total respect for him.
It's the difference between private initiative and bureaucratic largess, government agencies have zero monetary discipline or efficiency incentive. They don't care if it costs $1B to remove a solitary nest in fact they like it that way.
@@jameshayes7604 Most would die from honey bee stings doing that without protection. A beekeeper can likely take 100 honeybee stings in a day as a dozen might be ordinary. Safe bet you wouldn't survive doing that hornet hive, like he did, in normal clothing. (IDK how potent the stings of these mean hornets are, I'd assume the worse but they won't chew me to pieces even naked, they'd likely poison me to death)
When he took off half his body suit right next to the uprooted hive I was freaking. Like, how is it possible there are not a dozen stragglers just coming back to the hive and going crazy on him? This guy is a champ!
I think most of any that might have been left came back while he was doing the deed. He was definitely there for an hour or two more than enough time for the wanderers to come back
@@jimlee3236 yeah he did, but while watching the video my mind was just taking me to that place of what if? I really have no knowledge of the subject matter.
Whilst I admire the gentleman’s technique and bravado I personally would have used a 40mm bofors,I mean those things weren’t hornets they were small living aircraft.
IKR - I'm a beekeeper who has dealt with africanized bees but just that deep buzz these hornets make is scary as hell to me; wouldn't do this job if you paid me in gold.
@@mdb831 i wonder how they would look on military "active radar" (the spinning ones like on a battleship or an air force base) like if they were taken close enough to and made to swarm, what would their radar shape look like.
I've lived in SE Asia off and on since the 90's and the most impressive thing I saw is that he's in a neoprene armored space suit in what is probably 90 degree weather with 100% humidity. Got stung by one of those suckers one time hiking in Hong Kong. Luckily I had a small onion with me - specifically for wasp stings - and to my delight squishing a piece of onion until it was juicy and taping it on the sting spot worked almost as well as it does with smaller wasps. The only real difference was the actual tissue trauma inflicted by the giant stinger and/or those jaws. Kudos to this guy for being a real life boss.
Omg I don't understand how he walks through the forest so easily with testicles that gigantic. Absolutely amazing, he had the courage to mess with those jurassic monsters
From my limited mandarin understanding, most of what he's saying is remarking on what he's doing atm: 0:40 - We're looking for disturbed earth, which indicates the presence of the nest . 1:09 - We tagged [a hornet] at the base of the mountain, but we lost track of it, so we're tagging another one. We're not advancing any further (in danger of stumbling upon the nest). 1:24 - He said that one of them has gone to the opposite mountain face to see where exactly the hornet is heading. It's too dangerous (to just keep pushing forward). 2:00 - We just wasted another half an hour, and it's raining now. We're now in a 5 meter by 5 meter proximity of the nest, and are going to eliminate the nest. It's time to gear up. 2:25 - We've made a brand new hornet trap just for today. As for the nest, as there's a village nearby, we're going to exterminate them all. Let's go over to the entrance. 2:48 - Do you see the entrance? The tag is even still there. You can see the hornets moving the soil. 3:58 - We see the nest, it's a pretty big hole. Looks like three layers. 4:14 - It's more or less exposed, looks like three layers. Looks pretty full (?), let's remove it and take a look. 4:43 - It looks pretty full(?). 4 Layers. It weighs around 7 jin (3.5kg/7.7lbs). 4:59 - We're just catching the remaining hornets. 5:42 - Here's the queen. 6:02 - Look, the stinger is stuck in my glove. Look how long it is. 6:28 - We're removing our suits just 3 meters from where the nest was. This is because we exterminated the entire colony today. We exterminated the entire colony because they're very close to a village, 5-6 bee hives that way, and also a road. If they were on a mountain where people don't visit, I would recommend leaving some of them so as not to exterminate the entire colony. 6:53 - It seems to weigh around 7 jin (3.5kg/7.7lbs), and there's about 200 hornets in this container. There's more in this one, probably about 300.
This is such an excellent presentation. Even though it's not posted or CC'd in English, it's plain to understand the tracking methods in use. Much appreciated. We have a lot to learn.
If you have protective clothing, you can do it too. These people can earn income by catching hornets. If you want to eliminate hornets, you don’t need to be so complicated. You can spray poison and burn them alive.
it SHOULD be useless knowledge. since it would be an invasive species. and from the looks of it, they have mound building skills of generic ants, the swarming skills of army ants, the evil cold heart like killer bees, the abilty to sting several times like wasps, and if they came to any country outside of their local area, it would be an invasive species. again a skillset that would be nice but ultimatly SHOULD be useless. honeybess have a hard enough time as is alreay, lets NOT make them harm our valuable bees.
He explained that if the nest isn't so close to the village and six , seven bee hives; He would not have taken out all of the hornets. versus let say a hornet nest up in the mountain
Idk, the sound looked quite identical every time.. maybe the sound was real but they put it in loop for us to think that every 3 seconds a hornet passes near the microphone.
@@andreags4 it's the same 6 pulse sound that peaks in volume at the 3rd "wub" sound every time. Think I'd agree it's added in post. You can hear the regular buzzing underneath that one sound
The English translation is as follows. I'm a dumbass. I'm going to molest a murder hornets nest. I could have stayed in school, but chose to be a dumbass instead.
Would have loved to have subtitles as well That is cool How was your day there sir no new music Great video really need to put subtitles though Crazy motherfucca You could not pay me to do that shift fucc that
I always assumed Tay spoke more than one language. I was thinking of when American shows have subtitles on a guy a mutters or mumbles. What if I was watching one of those videos? Like is this a Chinese guy nobody understands without subtitles?
chinese descent here. they own a beehive or some sort and the hornets are attacking the bees, so they wanted to track the hives of these hornets to get rid of them as a revenge. they talked about the procedure and the size of the nest based off the soil expelled on the surface. They know there are more nests but decided not to get rid of all of them since it'd cause a local extinction.
From what I've read on reddit, this nest was near a road and some honey bee hives the hornets were constantly attacking, and so the local villagers asked him to remove it. He likely was not paid to do this, but the liquid in the second container was likely grain alcohol, and the way he makes his money from this is by selling alcohol with the dead hornets in it, which for some reason is considered a delicacy in China. Mad props to this guy for doing such a dangerous job with little tech besides that seriously thick suit
This was absolutely fascinating. Thank you to people in the comments section who were able to translate some of the conversation. I can only imagine the nightmare of stumbling upon a nest like this without the proper gear on.
Great video! I was in absolute awe watching - the camera work alone of the person capturing the entiretry, sharing with us viewers. 2 thumbs up to both. You did such an amazing job eliminating these dangerous HORNETS! Keep up the great work.
A brave hero. Watching that was terrifying. I cannot imagine doing what he did while smiling and casually explaining what he's doing. Nothing but RESPECT for this bad-ass.
So calm,cool & cavalier.He is no doubt definitely a professional in this feild.Accidentaly falling onto a bee hive,whilst collecting Nature Honey,could not be any worse. Imagine the painful excrutiation seering pangs of a regular standard sized Wasp.Then think of similarities of pressurized poisonous injections, within the major differences incomparison to such an insect.
That was absolutely incredible to watch! I’ve never seen someone take out a massive hornets nest by themselves, only using a large plastic bottle, a pick-axe, a glass jar, and a fly-swatter. This guy knows exactly what he’s doing and he’s extremely good at it. The hornets here in the United States can be dangerous but I know that the Asian variety are extremely dangerous, especially if you’re a bee keeper. One Asian hornet can annihilate an entire bee hive by standing in front of the hive entrance by chopping every single bee in half by using their mandibles. Asian hornets are a force to be reckoned with.
They're *very* territorial if I've read right. As people build more into forests, they run the risk of stumbling on natural nests. Apparently they'll warn you first by grinding their mandibles together and like, flapping their wings all together (like they're hitting a spear against the ground or something, yeesh-). When they attack, they use chemical messages to communicate with the rest of the hive. So when one goes on the attack, it's like they leave a flare on you saying "intruder!" and everyone else comes to drive you away.
Mostly right, but it actually takes2-5 Japanese Hornets to destroy a nest, because if it's only one.. bees Have a neat trick where thousands of them do a giant dog pile on the single intruder, covering it completely. Then they all begin to vibrate so fast that they create massive amounts of heat, literally cooking/melting the loan intruder. It's actually quite interesting 💯👍
@@XXhite That is a neat trick. I had no idea bees will dog pile the intruder to the point where they’re basically cooking them from all their internal heat. Thank you so much for the info and take care!👍🏻
I remember seeing that bee ball trick on a documentary about 15 yrs ago and it fascinated me! It stayed in the back of my mind, and now it's becoming common knowledge
@@frenchonion4595 - no lie, I thought the same thing. "Man, just look at the size of them monsters!! Sounds exactly like a WW2 bomber squadron!" 11:54 pm 10-3-21
@@frenchonion4595 - those guys have nerves of steel cuz not even for all the tea in China would you see me anywhere near That Demon's Nest! 11:11 pm 10-4-21
Sure makes the bee suits we use here in Florida look like painter clothes. That suit, while hot, is definately what I would want to use when they get to Florida!
I live in South Fl, and yeah, I'd bet you'd bake in those. Sounds like they come with a battery operated fan to pull in air through some small mesh opening, like the one they have in those inflatable dinosaur costumes. I think you can hear it running when he's facing the camera
Yeah, I bet they could easily sting through stuff like heavy cotton and denim. They could probably chew their way through pretty fast too if it came to it. That suit looks like an outer layer of mesh with a core of thick foam and likely an inner mesh to keep the foam in place. Makes sense though. You'd want at least half an inch of material between those fuckers and your flesh. All it would take is for one of them to make it inside the suit and you'd be having a very bad day. Hell, we just have Vespula Vulgaris here in the UK and they're bad enough.
@@mosesa2305 Yeah. They'll sting you just for the sake of it. And unlike bees, they don't rip their own guts out as the sting isn't barbed so an individual wasp can and will sting multiple times. They'll also happily wipe out entire bee hives. Don't get me wrong, they're not as huge as the ones in this video but they make up for it with sheer horribleness. Highly aggressive especially in autumn when the weather changes and their food sources start to run out. Nests can get super feisty. Then again, they don't have the term Vulgaris in their name for nothing although you might know them simply as "Yellow Jackets". They're arseholes with wings.
@@Crimsonedge1 Thanks. when in the UK I've seen yellow jackets around my property, like 1 or 2 flying around. Thankfully haven't been stung, they buzz around me sometimes and I walk away. Just 1 or 2 probably means I'm not near their nest and hence not a danger. However will have to be much more careful.
Came across a few of those when I was visiting the mountains here, and they were ABSOLUTELY HORRIFYING. They are so big, and the sound that they make is just scary. Glad that there are operations like these to remove them.
Yeah I thought that! A bit like on horror movies where they hide away in a closet to get away from a "baddie" They manage to hide well enough that the baddie doesn't find them& so leaves the room/ building. But then the person comes out from hiding straight away! I would stay in that closet for like half a day so I was sure the baddie had gone! (In this case the baddie is the murder hornets!) :-p Fair play to him though for killing those nasty things. Die murder hornets, die!!!
Love this Video!! The Americans have had a recent invasion of the Hornets in the Pacific North West, Then mucked about with tagging a wasp with a bluetooth transmitter these boys just tag one with a piece of ribbon that they can see and follow it back to the nest
@@persephone2706 They have been using the ribbon method in Japan and mainland Asia for generations, its low tech and the weight of the ribbon is enough to slow down the Hornet and keep it in view, High tech doesn't always mean better.
@@vaughanellis7866 you realize that they did lose track of the hornet at some point right? Part of the beginning was about how they found the one with the tracker again.
@@pumpkinchucker4953 Could be Iso (Alcohol) but in most cases all you need is soapy water . They breathe through their abdomen and the soap will suffocate them, it doesnt take much . Cheers .
@@ammocan2796 We could _all_ handle it? You sure about that? I believe that even with that suit most people would get PTSD from attempting it. Camera doesn't do it justice. That must be a very intense experience, even not getting stung. Like bullets whizzing all around him constantly.
@@ammocan2796 I think what you meant is that, with such a suit, it looks very safe and anyone "could" (in theory) do it. But I'd say not many would actually (in practice) be able to do it and do it well, especially without supervision. Personally, it would (in theory) be very therapeutic for me (as I have a phobia of wasps), but I would be kidding myself if I'd think I would be able to do it. These giant hornets have made it so much easier for me to handle the puny wasps I otherwise would encounter where I live, but my phobia is still there, and probably will never disappear fully.
That buzzing is very intimidating, the quantity of demons in that one nest is horrifying! He waves that orange net around like Sponge Bob Squarepants Jelly Fishing😂😂
This video is a lot more fun when you imagine he's a vengeful avatar summoned by the honey bees of the region performing a desperate dark ritual to defeat the giant hornets constantly raiding them
@@Aaron-yw7ji Oh damn, that's pretty weird for anything that has a solitary phase to return to having multiples in cooperation, or is there only one founding queen and the rest are just offspring? We have argentine ants being all invasive and shit over here in NZ and they do the same thing but with inter-nest cooperation on top, a lot less deadly though (at least to us).
the fact that this guy literally needs to wear half a hazmat suit to be protected from insects a fraction of his size. these things are inhumanely effective and the absolute stuff of nightmares
“My queen, our entire cavalry’s been captured in this impenetrable cubic forcefield..” Seems sallying forth against a besieging armored titan’s ineffective in Fortress Defense huh.
Live in Japan: I’ve seen murder hornets big enough to carry off small children. And the disposition of the f…. ers, they’re constantly pissed-off. Remind me of my wife!
Some of the hornets being grabbed directly from the combs are probably teneral, meaning they've emerged recently, and are relatively feeble, unaggressive, incapable of flying, and of rather drab coloration. It takes a couple days for them to mature completely after emerging from their cocoons (which are in the cells having the white caps, which the insects chew open when they emerge).
@@amberbob2634 Yes, that can happen. Bees and wasps aren't even defensive when they first emerge from their cocoons--and aren't really capable of stinging for at least a day or so. That changes soon enough, unless the enemy actually invades the nest such as one or more of these hornets.
Thank you for posting this video. I had no idea they could fly against that kind of drag! You may be able to take advantage of their heat intolerance by tacking black plastic over the ground nest, and letting the sun help your work.
I imagine they would dig out in another direction....I think giving them time to figure it out might not work. But who knows....it might....I think using their super aggressive nature and just having something like a bottle over the exit/entrance hole and agitating the ground...sending them into overdrive. Lol. They don't even think.....they just fly out to kill...to their own detriment.
The most insane part to me...in this merry-go-round of insanity...is how he's happy...smiling...barely even fazed...I'm terrified just watching this...nevermind actually doing it!
From what he was saying, he's actually afraid to move forward, not knowing where's the nest is located, until the spotter saw the streamer tied to one of the worker hornets. Once the nest's location was identified he was able to move forward and destroy the nest eventually. Of course being a pro helps. He's done this a couple of times obviously.
Even if I had that suit on, inside a military tank that has been encased in concrete, I still wouldn't go near their nest. Much respect for these guys.
Imagine leaving your fly open in a situation like this. Edit: seriously, just take your suit off next to the entrance of the nest?! What if some scouts or workers return and get angry?
thought so too... had a wasp nest removal on my balcony and after two weeks without going outside the fist time I went outside a wasp came flying and stung me right in my leg... hurt for 2 months....
I would love if you enabled others to translate this into different languages! It's somewhere in the video settings. Even if you add a transcript in the original language it will help. Thanks! EDIT: Your country's landscape is SO beautiful!
Probably has adaptively developed some resistance to the venom, similar to bee and snake handlers have some resistance. Thankyou for your service. The hornets, similar to many other insects, can develop immunity to pesticides, so after catching them they could be destroyed simply by pouring plenty of strong alcohol into the bottles. Ethanol would not poison ground water as bad as isopropyl or methanol, and after the big catch and nest removal operation, it would be good to soak the nest area with ethanol to destroy any stragglers. Ethanol also would probably destroy any hornet chemical pheromones.
Taking his suit off at the very site he destroyed the nest shows HIS ABSOLUTE CONFIDENCE IN HIS JOB.
Never know how many are out foraging and can come back at any time.
I wouldn't take that suit off until I was in a Walmart or civilization.
Lol, the first cameraman wasn't so lucky!
@@thekingofbohemia1 i wouldn't take off that suit until i was in another continent living under a false identity with a secret second family.
@@UA-camReviewsAndTutorialsMy Asian is a little rusty but I can roughly translate....."Wu sho ting eu wy to la, san sun chin chi cho wa lai, ceen di ho lan"...But that's just a rough translation.
I cannot believe he did this with Asian giant Hornets. We are watching a Legend here ladies and gentlemen.
It's only bees. Get a grip on yourself.
@@willymaykit1482then Record yourself doing what he did, let's see if it's "only bees" once you suffer anaphylaxis and die due to the several stings
@@asrieldreemurr2815 I'm an exterminator. I'm well aware.
@@willymaykit1482 alright, then go ahead and record it bud
@willymaykit1482 these wasps would wipe you out in a heartbeat. I mean go ahead and try to do this yourself. These fuckers are relentless
I think Guinness needs to update their record on who has the biggest balls in the world
You got that right!
No😮 kidding!
Actually that record is held by a grandmother and granddaughter who rushed to help a man being attacked by killer bees while the paramedics stood by because it was too dangerous for them and the grandmother knew she was allergic to bee stings on top of everything! That poor man didnt make unfortunately 😢
Just the fact they managed to track one hornet back to it's hive in the middle of a mountain is incredible.
They killed his sensei
they tied a white flag to the hornet and that sealed their doom.
And they sent a whole team of people to WA State to take out one nest and this guy does it alone with a pick, a couple of plastic juice bottles and another smaller jar to catch the stragglers lol. Total respect for him.
It's the difference between private initiative and bureaucratic largess, government agencies have zero monetary discipline or efficiency incentive. They don't care if it costs $1B to remove a solitary nest in fact they like it that way.
They also used to living with this hornets
You forgot to mention the most important tool... an impenetrable suit that protects him from BEING KILLED 😆
@@jameshayes7604 Most would die from honey bee stings doing that without protection. A beekeeper can likely take 100 honeybee stings in a day as a dozen might be ordinary. Safe bet you wouldn't survive doing that hornet hive, like he did, in normal clothing.
(IDK how potent the stings of these mean hornets are, I'd assume the worse but they won't chew me to pieces even naked, they'd likely poison me to death)
Straggler...lmfao
when a hornet is big enought to have a plastic walmart bag on it to track it you need to break out the flame throwers
as i'm watching this video, it's exactly what i was thinking. napalm.....just burn the mountain down....just in case lol
Bezos is licking his chops wondering if they can be trained to deliver packages. 😁
LMAO, so true!!
That's BIG Facts!
Lighter + Spray Paint Can = Homemade Flame Thrower
This man, and the cameraman have solid brass balls of steel. You are kings amongst men.
Brass balls of steel? Just brass balls. If they’re brass balls they can’t be steel.
@@TheAntiqBoutiqwhen he said brass balls I was like yup n then “of steel” I was like huhh?😂
I am VERY impressed. All it takes is a few soda bottles and a giant water bear suit which is super smart. A huge congrats and kudos to them!
When he took off half his body suit right next to the uprooted hive I was freaking. Like, how is it possible there are not a dozen stragglers just coming back to the hive and going crazy on him? This guy is a champ!
I think most of any that might have been left came back while he was doing the deed. He was definitely there for an hour or two more than enough time for the wanderers to come back
So the secret is the orange net
he said he eliminated every wasp since theres a village nearby the nest, and apiaries on the mountain
@@jimlee3236 yeah he did, but while watching the video my mind was just taking me to that place of what if? I really have no knowledge of the subject matter.
I wouldn't have taken the suit off until I got home!!!
Whilst I admire the gentleman’s technique and bravado I personally would have used a 40mm bofors,I mean those things weren’t hornets they were small living aircraft.
IKR - I'm a beekeeper who has dealt with africanized bees but just that deep buzz these hornets make is scary as hell to me; wouldn't do this job if you paid me in gold.
Seriously, these bastards are big enough to track with ciws.
@@mdb831 i wonder how they would look on military "active radar" (the spinning ones like on a battleship or an air force base) like if they were taken close enough to and made to swarm, what would their radar shape look like.
I think from now on ill call them: Homicide helicopters.
Or a Flame Thrower.... jeez.
I've lived in SE Asia off and on since the 90's and the most impressive thing I saw is that he's in a neoprene armored space suit in what is probably 90 degree weather with 100% humidity. Got stung by one of those suckers one time hiking in Hong Kong. Luckily I had a small onion with me - specifically for wasp stings - and to my delight squishing a piece of onion until it was juicy and taping it on the sting spot worked almost as well as it does with smaller wasps. The only real difference was the actual tissue trauma inflicted by the giant stinger and/or those jaws. Kudos to this guy for being a real life boss.
Omg I don't understand how he walks through the forest so easily with testicles that gigantic. Absolutely amazing, he had the courage to mess with those jurassic monsters
I could do that too with the protective suit on.
He's wearing a protective suit that gives zero chance of them stinging you. Why is that so scary to anyone? It would probably be fun if anything else
@@neo7759 ... that's the same protective suit they wear to deactivate bombs and other explosives.
There are usually scarier things than bees in the forest. @@neo7759
He Is literally saying that he is scared AF 😂
From my limited mandarin understanding, most of what he's saying is remarking on what he's doing atm:
0:40 - We're looking for disturbed earth, which indicates the presence of the nest .
1:09 - We tagged [a hornet] at the base of the mountain, but we lost track of it, so we're tagging another one. We're not advancing any further (in danger of stumbling upon the nest).
1:24 - He said that one of them has gone to the opposite mountain face to see where exactly the hornet is heading. It's too dangerous (to just keep pushing forward).
2:00 - We just wasted another half an hour, and it's raining now. We're now in a 5 meter by 5 meter proximity of the nest, and are going to eliminate the nest. It's time to gear up.
2:25 - We've made a brand new hornet trap just for today. As for the nest, as there's a village nearby, we're going to exterminate them all. Let's go over to the entrance.
2:48 - Do you see the entrance? The tag is even still there. You can see the hornets moving the soil.
3:58 - We see the nest, it's a pretty big hole. Looks like three layers.
4:14 - It's more or less exposed, looks like three layers. Looks pretty full (?), let's remove it and take a look.
4:43 - It looks pretty full(?). 4 Layers. It weighs around 7 jin (3.5kg/7.7lbs).
4:59 - We're just catching the remaining hornets.
5:42 - Here's the queen.
6:02 - Look, the stinger is stuck in my glove. Look how long it is.
6:28 - We're removing our suits just 3 meters from where the nest was. This is because we exterminated the entire colony today. We exterminated the entire colony because they're very close to a village, 5-6 bee hives that way, and also a road. If they were on a mountain where people don't visit, I would recommend leaving some of them so as not to exterminate the entire colony.
6:53 - It seems to weigh around 7 jin (3.5kg/7.7lbs), and there's about 200 hornets in this container. There's more in this one, probably about 300.
Thank you 🙏
Thankyou so much!
Thank you 😊
thank you
You da man dood!!
This is such an excellent presentation. Even though it's not posted or CC'd in English, it's plain to understand the tracking methods in use. Much appreciated. We have a lot to learn.
ive seen drones used to follow them too
If you have protective clothing, you can do it too. These people can earn income by catching hornets. If you want to eliminate hornets, you don’t need to be so complicated. You can spray poison and burn them alive.
it SHOULD be useless knowledge.
since it would be an invasive species.
and from the looks of it, they have mound building skills of generic ants, the swarming skills of army ants, the evil cold heart like killer bees, the abilty to sting several times like wasps, and if they came to any country outside of their local area, it would be an invasive species.
again a skillset that would be nice but ultimatly SHOULD be useless.
honeybess have a hard enough time as is alreay, lets NOT make them harm our valuable bees.
He explained that if the nest isn't so close to the village and six , seven bee hives; He would not have taken out all of the hornets. versus let say a hornet nest up in the mountain
There should be english -subtitles if the title of the video is in english too
What an absolutely ingenious method for locating the nest! Way to go guys!
That was crazy!! I've been watching wasp nest removals for years but I've never seen these before! His bravery and skill are both incredible!
The vibration from the wings have some BASS.
I thought that was scary music at first 😳
Yes it does. The sound through my BBE and Cerwin-Vega speakers is insane. WWII bombers.
Idk, the sound looked quite identical every time.. maybe the sound was real but they put it in loop for us to think that every 3 seconds a hornet passes near the microphone.
@@andreags4 it's the same 6 pulse sound that peaks in volume at the 3rd "wub" sound every time. Think I'd agree it's added in post. You can hear the regular buzzing underneath that one sound
@@andreags4 it’s annoying.
Wow! English captions would be lovely.
The English translation is as follows.
I'm a dumbass. I'm going to molest a murder hornets nest.
I could have stayed in school, but chose to be a dumbass instead.
Would have loved to have subtitles as well That is cool How was your day there sir no new music Great video really need to put subtitles though Crazy motherfucca You could not pay me to do that shift fucc that
I always assumed Tay spoke more than one language. I was thinking of when American shows have subtitles on a guy a mutters or mumbles. What if I was watching one of those videos? Like is this a Chinese guy nobody understands without subtitles?
Learn the Asian dialect. You’re more than capable of learning anything. 🤷🏾♂️
chinese descent here. they own a beehive or some sort and the hornets are attacking the bees, so they wanted to track the hives of these hornets to get rid of them as a revenge.
they talked about the procedure and the size of the nest based off the soil expelled on the surface. They know there are more nests but decided not to get rid of all of them since it'd cause a local extinction.
I'm amazed and impressed that he achieved this without any toxic chemicals that I could see. Bravo!
Wtf do you thinks in the jug?
Alcohol
No vacuums, just a butterfly net. What a legend!
Not sure what that sound was around the 5:30 mark but sure sounded like a vacuum. Maybe it was his suit?
@@RichWeigel yes, that's definitely a vacuum. But he doesn't use it to collect the hornets.
@@RichWeigel there's a general fan sound throughout the time he's wearing his suit, i think it is for ventilation
Didn't understand a word. All I have to say is RESPECT!!!
you'd think he;s suiting up to deal with an IED with how thick that layering is XD
"RESPECT" 100%
This guy isn’t afraid of shit. I wouldn’t take that suit of within 5 miles of that nest.
Respect for what? Killing/Disturbing animals?
@@rekkorder karen lmao insects btw
From what I've read on reddit, this nest was near a road and some honey bee hives the hornets were constantly attacking, and so the local villagers asked him to remove it. He likely was not paid to do this, but the liquid in the second container was likely grain alcohol, and the way he makes his money from this is by selling alcohol with the dead hornets in it, which for some reason is considered a delicacy in China. Mad props to this guy for doing such a dangerous job with little tech besides that seriously thick suit
Sounds like a Witcher contract.
Have you the link from Reddit?
Obviously china
@@dhritishmanhazarika3894 Hah great comment.
Not a delicacy as in tasting good but for their (unproven) medicinal benefits... similar to eating animal reproductive organ helps...
That was the most clever way I've seen of catching the hornets and preventing a big swarm. Brilliant dude!!
Absolutely fascinating watching someone so skilled at a job.
This was absolutely fascinating. Thank you to people in the comments section who were able to translate some of the conversation. I can only imagine the nightmare of stumbling upon a nest like this without the proper gear on.
Pretty much a horrendous death. Ouchy
I suspect you only can stumble onto a nest like that by accident once.
If you accidentally stumbled on that, they would surely kill you.
Last year I did and it was no fun
How fast and far can you run?
Crazy he just takes the suit off in the same spot
He took it to a different spot. Just brought nest with him.
@@hydraxc2478 he meant when he zipped it down I believe, when he first got all of them
His big balls needed fresh air.
I would’ve walked at least a mile and a half away from the site before I took my suit off.
True victory!
I didn't understand a single word he said, but I witnessed a high level professional execute an absolute amazing job.
(Now subscribed)
These guys are smart, and brave and pretty tough. What an awesome job. You guys are heroes, keep up the good work!
Would love to hear English translation/subtitles, Im sure you have a wealth of knowledge on the subject I wished I could understand.
I have
Yeah apparently we need to learn how to do this now
He said ..its very hot inside this dress
this young man has nerves of steel! they are so large and so loud!
@@ginnywalter9382 the bee?
simply the hum of the hornets flying around the camera is enough to send me into a cold sweat
Even with that kind of protection I'd be in a total panic.
Man, it was less of a Bzzzz and a more of a Wuuuuuub. I'd be bringing a flamethrower to take them out lol
@@JeffReeves I thought they sounded like jedi lightsabers .
@@rotekkable They did kind of have that sound didn't they haha
Listening with ear buds in, anyone else listening that way? I think this makes the sound even more disturbing lol.
Great video! I was in absolute awe watching - the camera work alone of the person capturing the entiretry, sharing with us viewers. 2 thumbs up to both. You did such an amazing job eliminating these dangerous HORNETS! Keep up the great work.
Hornet: Look I got a new accessory
Colony: FUCK
That’s insane how did he get his enormous balls in that protective suit amazing.
if YOU did it.....how many yt hits? i bet a shit ton!!!
I can’t stop itching!
"Hey Yichen -- your fly's unzipped!"
🤣🤣🤣🤣
I know, they have to be at least as large as the jars he was putting the bees in.
"Here's the queen" rage yeets into bottle.
lmao 'Rage Yeet' is my new fav term.
if you dont rage yeet, are you really yeeting?
Bad day to be a queen....
5:40
@@killdozer3464 answer, no.
Love the children’s rock pool net, reminds me of days gone by at the beach when I was a child. Huge beasties.
A brave hero. Watching that was terrifying. I cannot imagine doing what he did while smiling and casually explaining what he's doing. Nothing but RESPECT for this bad-ass.
It would be terrifying if he didn't have a suit.
So calm,cool & cavalier.He is no doubt definitely a professional in this feild.Accidentaly falling onto a bee hive,whilst collecting Nature Honey,could not be any worse. Imagine the painful excrutiation seering pangs of a regular standard sized Wasp.Then think of similarities of pressurized poisonous injections, within the major differences incomparison to such an insect.
Bcs they enjoy it and used to it
@@FrYLocK41 He would be dead
He has a suit the hornets can't penetrate. There's no reason to be afraid
That was absolutely incredible to watch! I’ve never seen someone take out a massive hornets nest by themselves, only using a large plastic bottle, a pick-axe, a glass jar, and a fly-swatter. This guy knows exactly what he’s doing and he’s extremely good at it. The hornets here in the United States can be dangerous but I know that the Asian variety are extremely dangerous, especially if you’re a bee keeper. One Asian hornet can annihilate an entire bee hive by standing in front of the hive entrance by chopping every single bee in half by using their mandibles. Asian hornets are a force to be reckoned with.
They're *very* territorial if I've read right. As people build more into forests, they run the risk of stumbling on natural nests. Apparently they'll warn you first by grinding their mandibles together and like, flapping their wings all together (like they're hitting a spear against the ground or something, yeesh-).
When they attack, they use chemical messages to communicate with the rest of the hive. So when one goes on the attack, it's like they leave a flare on you saying "intruder!" and everyone else comes to drive you away.
Mostly right, but it actually takes2-5 Japanese Hornets to destroy a nest, because if it's only one.. bees Have a neat trick where thousands of them do a giant dog pile on the single intruder, covering it completely. Then they all begin to vibrate so fast that they create massive amounts of heat, literally cooking/melting the loan intruder. It's actually quite interesting 💯👍
@@XXhite That is a neat trick. I had no idea bees will dog pile the intruder to the point where they’re basically cooking them from all their internal heat. Thank you so much for the info and take care!👍🏻
@@archangel5627 only Japanese Bees can pull that off not American
I remember seeing that bee ball trick on a documentary about 15 yrs ago and it fascinated me! It stayed in the back of my mind, and now it's becoming common knowledge
This gentleman is an absolute RockStar, well done. 🇨🇦👍
Outstanding work!!! Very efficient and fearless.
listening to this with headphones is literally a nightmare
Hahahahahhaha
the audio is clearly fake
@@vihai ah dude you broke my nightmare
@@vihai you need new headphones
@@Raisethefirewithin nope, the humming sound is the very same sample played again and again, you may compare it with a spectrograph if you wish.
I wish I trusted anything as much as that guy trusts that suit… wow.
You learn with time and experience how to trust your gears
Compare that suit with what be keepers in US wear... he is like a teddy bear for a dog
I was thinking the same thing.
@@CbrF4i600cc big difference though. The beekeeping suits are for honey bees, these are thicker to keep them dang giant stingers out.
how wouldnt you trust that big ass suit?
Big props to the person who tied that plastic to that hornet. You are the real hero here.
Who is here from the short?
I'm from Facebook 😅😅
Yep
Meee
I said aint no way
@@demetriusbarnes 😂
Just the sound of them buzzing by the microphone was enough to give me the willies
I hate that noise --- it creeps me out and makes me wince
@@frenchonion4595 - no lie, I thought the same thing. "Man, just look at the size of them monsters!! Sounds exactly like a WW2 bomber squadron!" 11:54 pm 10-3-21
@@frenchonion4595 - those guys have nerves of steel cuz not even for all the tea in China would you see me anywhere near That Demon's Nest! 11:11 pm 10-4-21
Seriously you got it!
@@teedeeiss with a suit like he had, I probably would be fairly unfazed. Anything else though and I'm not getting close.
Sure makes the bee suits we use here in Florida look like painter clothes. That suit, while hot, is definately what I would want to use when they get to Florida!
I live in South Fl, and yeah, I'd bet you'd bake in those. Sounds like they come with a battery operated fan to pull in air through some small mesh opening, like the one they have in those inflatable dinosaur costumes. I think you can hear it running when he's facing the camera
Yeah, I bet they could easily sting through stuff like heavy cotton and denim. They could probably chew their way through pretty fast too if it came to it. That suit looks like an outer layer of mesh with a core of thick foam and likely an inner mesh to keep the foam in place. Makes sense though. You'd want at least half an inch of material between those fuckers and your flesh. All it would take is for one of them to make it inside the suit and you'd be having a very bad day. Hell, we just have Vespula Vulgaris here in the UK and they're bad enough.
@@Crimsonedge1 Are Vespula Vulgaris aggressive? do they sting people randomly?
@@mosesa2305 Yeah. They'll sting you just for the sake of it. And unlike bees, they don't rip their own guts out as the sting isn't barbed so an individual wasp can and will sting multiple times. They'll also happily wipe out entire bee hives.
Don't get me wrong, they're not as huge as the ones in this video but they make up for it with sheer horribleness. Highly aggressive especially in autumn when the weather changes and their food sources start to run out. Nests can get super feisty.
Then again, they don't have the term Vulgaris in their name for nothing although you might know them simply as "Yellow Jackets".
They're arseholes with wings.
@@Crimsonedge1 Thanks.
when in the UK I've seen yellow jackets around my property, like 1 or 2 flying around. Thankfully haven't been stung, they buzz around me sometimes and I walk away. Just 1 or 2 probably means I'm not near their nest and hence not a danger. However will have to be much more careful.
Came across a few of those when I was visiting the mountains here, and they were ABSOLUTELY HORRIFYING. They are so big, and the sound that they make is just scary. Glad that there are operations like these to remove them.
Great work my friend 🐝 👍
Wow, so many and such a huge nest! That suit was crazy, I wouldn't be taking that suit off until I was far away from that area!
i mean, ever..
I was imagining a couple of squadrons coming back from patrol at that very moment.
Yeah I thought that! A bit like on horror movies where they hide away in a closet to get away from a "baddie" They manage to hide well enough that the baddie doesn't find them& so leaves the room/ building. But then the person comes out from hiding straight away! I would stay in that closet for like half a day so I was sure the baddie had gone! (In this case the baddie is the murder hornets!) :-p Fair play to him though for killing those nasty things. Die murder hornets, die!!!
That's what I was thinking
when he finally takes off the suit he said that they had gone quite a ways away from the original site of the hive
Asian Giant Hornet Queen: "WHY DO I HEAR BOSS MUSIC"
Thanks for the subtitles, they helped a great deal as I don't happen to speak Mandarin.
bravo excellent travail pour sauver nos abeilles, merci pour votre travail
Plot twist, the camera man is wearing shorts and t-shirt.
uhg! I was gonna 👍 but didn't want to bust the "69" :P
@@VFRyan800 still 69 69 minutes later!
@@btwbrand ✌ respect
I don't think so, he would be in a hospital by now.
@@VFRyan800 😂🤘🏻
Love this Video!! The Americans have had a recent invasion of the Hornets in the Pacific North West, Then mucked about with tagging a wasp with a bluetooth transmitter these boys just tag one with a piece of ribbon that they can see and follow it back to the nest
I was thinking the exact same thing.
Do you realize how easy it is to lose that wasp though? A transmitter is much easier...
@@persephone2706 They have been using the ribbon method in Japan and mainland Asia for generations, its low tech and the weight of the ribbon is enough to slow down the Hornet and keep it in view, High tech doesn't always mean better.
@@persephone2706 exactly!
@@vaughanellis7866 you realize that they did lose track of the hornet at some point right? Part of the beginning was about how they found the one with the tracker again.
I did not know anyone made suits to resist hornets. Very interesting. Amazing video.
Brilliant! Well done 👏
That one dislike is the guy who brought murder hornets to America
Its seem that its 55 of them...
B I L L G A T E s
139 now its an Army! LMAO
Its from hornet king and his followers
@@rocketmann8333 I wonder how big a nest can actually get if their populations aren't checked by weather
This guy is my hero. I want to be on his team. I thought I had trouble with hornets in my backyard but that is crazy and I'm a bee keeper.
Great job sir.. you are very good at getting the nests.. Thank you..
你們很厲害!真的很勇敢啊!
Wow! He captured, and dug up that nest like it was a walk in the park. Amazing job he did, and courage to.
These guys just saved some human lives out there! Great job!
And bee lives too... Probably cow lives.. pig lives... Honestly screw these hornets lol.
How and why?
@@Dck765 The nest was very close to a village with lifestock and bees.
Not true, they don't kill people.
@boblatkey7160 prove it yourself i dare you
I love how you track the hornet. simple but super effective.
Waving that little net 🤘😂🤘 Dude's a boss!
The brave extraction aside, i found it fantastic how the hornets nest was neatly built under the soil, with only a small entrance.
Bees are super similar! Bumblebees are my favorite! They both love a small entrance :)
@@vice.nor.virtuei am like bumbleebees i also love a small enterancd
@@Cb-zj5xl dude what is with your spelling of "enteranced" it should say _entrance._
@@vice.nor.virtue who gives a fuck?
@@Cb-zj5xl people who like spelling.
The fact that he pulls out the nest so clean without breaking it makes it very satisfying.
Fantastic job. Thank you. Much respect to you.
Can someone please add English subtitles to the video? This guy is amazing. Would like to know more about his suit
Impressive and what a clever method. No chemicals used and very effective.
@@pumpkinchucker4953 Could be Iso (Alcohol) but in most cases all you need is soapy water . They breathe through their abdomen and the soap will suffocate them, it doesnt take much . Cheers .
No chemicals requires. Just massive, massive balls of steel.
Fuck that dude burn the hole florest if needed just kill those giant monsters lol
@@ammocan2796 We could _all_ handle it? You sure about that? I believe that even with that suit most people would get PTSD from attempting it. Camera doesn't do it justice. That must be a very intense experience, even not getting stung. Like bullets whizzing all around him constantly.
@@ammocan2796 I think what you meant is that, with such a suit, it looks very safe and anyone "could" (in theory) do it.
But I'd say not many would actually (in practice) be able to do it and do it well, especially without supervision. Personally, it would (in theory) be very therapeutic for me (as I have a phobia of wasps), but I would be kidding myself if I'd think I would be able to do it. These giant hornets have made it so much easier for me to handle the puny wasps I otherwise would encounter where I live, but my phobia is still there, and probably will never disappear fully.
That buzzing is very intimidating, the quantity of demons in that one nest is horrifying! He waves that orange net around like Sponge Bob Squarepants Jelly Fishing😂😂
🤣🤣🤣🤣🤣
Incredible video. I just wish it had been CC in English because I would have loved to read his commentary as he worked.
I understand that this nest had to go. Job wel done. But don't these hornets build remarkable, amazing, and ingenious structured beautiful nests!
This video is a lot more fun when you imagine he's a vengeful avatar summoned by the honey bees of the region performing a desperate dark ritual to defeat the giant hornets constantly raiding them
Yes 100%
You need to get a life dude!
@@skigdividerx4991 you need to mind your own life, if it's that great.
His vaguely honeycombish exoskeleton does look like the sort of thing a honey-mad bee priest would imagine when summoning a golem.
I like your Imagination
At 5:42 it looks like he grabbed a queen...that would prevent one less nest from re-establishing itself. This is amazing work!
Yup, that was the queen
@@jorgesabori1222 a* queen. Giant hornets can and will have multiples in the nest.
@@Aaron-yw7ji Oh damn, that's pretty weird for anything that has a solitary phase to return to having multiples in cooperation, or is there only one founding queen and the rest are just offspring? We have argentine ants being all invasive and shit over here in NZ and they do the same thing but with inter-nest cooperation on top, a lot less deadly though (at least to us).
@@Aaron-yw7ji I was just translating what he said...had no idea these could have more than one queen. That makes them even more scarier, damn!
I really wanted the queen to get more screen time. She looked fucking HUGE
Amazing!!!!😱😱😱😱 This helps bees and the plants which are very important. Thanks to this person
the fact that this guy literally needs to wear half a hazmat suit to be protected from insects a fraction of his size. these things are inhumanely effective and the absolute stuff of nightmares
“My queen, our entire cavalry’s been captured in this impenetrable cubic forcefield..”
Seems sallying forth against a besieging armored titan’s ineffective in Fortress Defense huh.
Ah, friends...there she is...the cagey but winsome, Sally Forth...
There's a light saber battle happening right around this guy and he doesn't even flinch!!
I want a suit like that!!
lol i almost spit up when it dawned on me what you meant
star wars probably sampled hornets to get the sound for the saber
@@aus-reviews8462 nope, the Lucas team was using way more nerdy shit for that…
Das war großartig, mutig und sehr gut, sie aus Sicherheitsgründen loszuwerden.
These heros wear hornet suits. Amazing work! 👍
wouldn't even catch me dead near that thing.
Actually, there's a high likelihood that we would
@@wuddadid nice lol
Live in Japan: I’ve seen murder hornets big enough to carry off small children. And the disposition of the f…. ers, they’re constantly pissed-off. Remind me of my wife!
They must be vegetarians. Or feminists.
In the bush they have tsetse flies the size of eagles. Jose Greco de Muertos. They carry little brown babies off to almost certain death. -P. Falk
@@carrisasteveinnes1596 Actually, both! Like seriously!
Hornet: evolution
Humans: intellegence
incredible work ethic gives new meaning to thorough job well done!
Some of the hornets being grabbed directly from the combs are probably teneral, meaning they've emerged recently, and are relatively feeble, unaggressive, incapable of flying, and of rather drab coloration. It takes a couple days for them to mature completely after emerging from their cocoons (which are in the cells having the white caps, which the insects chew open when they emerge).
I’d be pissed if I was a bee that just emerged from my nest, ready to live my life and then this guy comes
@@amberbob2634 Yes, that can happen. Bees and wasps aren't even defensive when they first emerge from their cocoons--and aren't really capable of stinging for at least a day or so. That changes soon enough, unless the enemy actually invades the nest such as one or more of these hornets.
@@bobjacobson858 thank you for being kind and giving info too! Appreciate to see another kind human on here :)
Spawn camping
@@amberbob2634bees are useful for us humans that's why we protect them killing those fucking hornets
Thank you for posting this video.
I had no idea they could fly against that kind of drag! You may be able to take advantage of their heat intolerance by tacking black plastic over the ground nest, and letting the sun help your work.
These things are machines. Probably still keep going if they lost a wing...asymmetric flight...no problem.
@@bv3bv334 bunch of Rutans, eh?
I imagine they would dig out in another direction....I think giving them time to figure it out might not work. But who knows....it might....I think using their super aggressive nature and just having something like a bottle over the exit/entrance hole and agitating the ground...sending them into overdrive. Lol. They don't even think.....they just fly out to kill...to their own detriment.
Pozdrawiam Serdecznie Z POLSKI 🇵🇱
Nice job!!
The most insane part to me...in this merry-go-round of insanity...is how he's happy...smiling...barely even fazed...I'm terrified just watching this...nevermind actually doing it!
From what he was saying, he's actually afraid to move forward, not knowing where's the nest is located, until the spotter saw the streamer tied to one of the worker hornets. Once the nest's location was identified he was able to move forward and destroy the nest eventually. Of course being a pro helps. He's done this a couple of times obviously.
@@user-le6hc2tn1u freakin crazy.
Thats why nobody will remember your name.
merry-go-round of insanity!! 😂 have to agree!
He's used to it, as with skyscraper construction workers and window cleaners and their fear of heights.
The decision to remove the bee suit while he's still at the site took balls. Picking up the nest bare handed. WOW.
imagine 1 hornet flies away, becomes a queen, and starts their villian arc.
Vous connaissez très bien le secteur bravo, votre méthode est simple et super efficace.👍🏼🤍
I didn‘t understand a word he said but was still Faszination and captivated the whole time.
Amazing video
You are a HERO sir! Simple and very effective hornet nest removal. Bravo Zulu!
Это гнездо азиатских шершней
I hope you guys add english subs cause this is entertaining
Even if I had that suit on, inside a military tank that has been encased in concrete, I still wouldn't go near their nest. Much respect for these guys.
Love how the first two words in the title are "ERADICATION MURDER".
Imagine leaving your fly open in a situation like this.
Edit: seriously, just take your suit off next to the entrance of the nest?! What if some scouts or workers return and get angry?
LOL !!!!!!!!
thought so too... had a wasp nest removal on my balcony and after two weeks without going outside the fist time I went outside a wasp came flying and stung me right in my leg... hurt for 2 months....
What if just one shows up!! My blood pressure shot up thinking about that, let alone a group of them...he's brave man
I would love if you enabled others to translate this into different languages! It's somewhere in the video settings. Even if you add a transcript in the original language it will help. Thanks!
EDIT: Your country's landscape is SO beautiful!
Probably has adaptively developed some resistance to the venom, similar to bee and snake handlers have some resistance. Thankyou for your service.
The hornets, similar to many other insects, can develop immunity to pesticides, so after catching them they could be destroyed simply by pouring plenty of strong alcohol into the bottles. Ethanol would not poison ground water as bad as isopropyl or methanol, and after the big catch and nest removal operation, it would be good to soak the nest area with ethanol to destroy any stragglers. Ethanol also would probably destroy any hornet chemical pheromones.
Holy Mother of Jesus, what the heck?? That was absoluteley riveting, mindblowing, and incredibly courageous. What an epically awesome man. Wowzers!