The company says the product will "catch anything that lands on it."
It appears the TrapStik, does exactly that.
A woman from Waterloo has complained to the company after she found her wasp trap, instead caught seven small birds over a period of five days.
But the company says that's not what usually happens, telling CTV that after more than a million sales of the product, there have only been reports of bird being caught "about a dozen times."
This one was purchased at Real Canadian Superstore, and parent company Loblaw has agreed to pull the product from the shelves and give a full refund to anyone who wants to return their TrapStiks.
In the instructions for the product, the company says it shouldn't be placed in a natural setting. But then, in an instructional video, a person is shown doing exactly that.
Normally, it's intended to be placed in eaves troughs, or near a building to catch problem wasps.