A drone equipped with a gasoline tank and an arm-length nozzle incinerates a wasp nest in Zhong county, China. Photo / Blue Sky Rescue via AP
A drone equipped with a gasoline tank and an arm-length nozzle incinerates a wasp nest in Zhong county, China. Photo / Blue Sky Rescue via AP
A drone has been converted into a flying flamethrower in central China in a fiery campaign to eradicate more than 100 wasp nests.
Blue Sky Rescue, a volunteer group that conducts search and rescue and other emergency work, has teamed up with villagers in Zhong county near the city ofChongqing.
They raised 80,000 yuan (NZ$17,241) to buy a drone and equip it with a gasoline tank and an arm-length nozzle.
Videos released by Blue Sky show a recent mission by the six-arm drone. It hovers above a hive as large as a suitcase before swooping down. The drone operator flips the ignition switch, and the drone spits bursts of fire onto the hive.
"The burning ashes of the wasp's nest gradually peeled off and fell, and the surrounding residents applauded and praised the rescue team," said an article on a local news app run by state-owned Chongqing TV.
The DIY drone has destroyed 11 nests so far. Photo / Blue Sky Recue via AP
The article quotes a resident thanking Blue Sky for helping the village: "Now we don't have to worry about being stung by a wasp."
Blue Sky said it has destroyed 11 hives so far. There are more than 100 to go.
Blue Sky Rescue volunteers prepare the $17k drone for takeoff. Photo / Blue Sky Rescue via AP