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Post by admin on Jun 24, 2013 18:14:28 GMT -8
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w1
Full Member
Have had a great start to my season
Posts: 123
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Post by w1 on Jun 25, 2013 18:02:43 GMT -8
Bet that was an exciting task. Wow!!!!
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Post by prillbug4 on Jun 27, 2013 17:08:56 GMT -8
I heard that when they swarm, you need to stand still and don't move. They usually won't attack if you do that. Jeff Prill
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Post by bobw on Jun 28, 2013 1:37:54 GMT -8
I heard that when they swarm, you need to stand still and don't move. They usually won't attack if you do that. Jeff Prill Probably easier said than done! Bob
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Post by prillbug4 on Jul 31, 2013 16:26:55 GMT -8
Actually, it's true. The late John Bouseman from Illinois Natural History Survey, always said that if you stand still, they won't see you, and won't swarm around you. You just simply have to stand and wait for them to settle down, and then back away slowly. Jeff Prill
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Post by hibiscusmile on Aug 1, 2013 5:10:16 GMT -8
Does fainting count?
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Post by zdenol123 on Aug 6, 2013 23:18:47 GMT -8
they have termovision, so you can do whatever you want, nothing will help you if they will decide, that you are a danger for their nest...another thing is, that they can smell you. So, if 10 people would stand around the nest and only 1 of them would damage the nest, only that person would get attacked, the rest should be fine...if they would not panic and run around ...
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Post by wingedwishes on Aug 12, 2013 16:25:44 GMT -8
I made a big mistake as a 10 year old and disturbed a nest while trying to reach for some trash to clean up an area. I ended up stung 75 times. I remembered that I had read a new age book about how crystals heal so I thought it was worth a try and took a quartz crystal from my mineral collection and put it on a sting. The properties of the quartz absorbed the feverish heat from a stung area and it got really hot. I never measured the temp of the quartz but if I get stung again, I'll measure it with an infrared thermometer. thirty some odd years later, the stinger can just be seen in a joint in my hand surrounded by scar tissue. I'm no new ager, I just thought the heat transmission was interesting.
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Post by mikelock34 on Sept 27, 2013 20:05:10 GMT -8
I can vouch for the standing still working. I stepped up on an old pallet buried in the brush near my grandparents' house in the woods as a child. There was a big nest under the pallet. They swarmed out and covered me from the waist down. The also had several on my chest and arms. Not one of them stung me as I stood there frozen. They eventually went back down to their nest. I ran like hell and had a good story to tell afterwards.
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Post by anthony on Oct 3, 2013 13:21:52 GMT -8
Lucky it was not Vespa madarinia.
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