To bee.....or what?
#151
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Joined: Jul 2005
Posts: 15,019


thought this place was bad enough with mozzies the size of aeroplanes (slight exaggeration, only slight) but ticks crawling up your leg

#152
I scratched my head last week during a meeting and felt one. Bad luck, he had already attached!:curse: I had to pull and kill him without anybody figuring out what I was up to. I was worried I wouldn't find him again if I waited till later.
#153
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Joined: Jun 2007
Posts: 8,913









Help Michiganders!!!
I have just killed the biggest bee type creature I have ever seen in my life. It was in our yard when I pulled up and almost flew in the car widow. It seemed pissed right off by the car and kept dive bombing it. I ran away leaving the keys in the car. I had to attack it with a broom and it took some killing.
It is about an inch long dead, alive it looked as big as my thumb. I have googled it and am wondering if it could be a queen yellowjacket? A site I found said they tend to be half inch long while the queen is almost an inch (this is an inch at least). What I am wondering is - and this may sound dumb but I have a total phobia of bees and especially wasps and even more especially dinosaur sized wasps!!! - is there any way it's buddies could know it is dead and start looking for revenge or something, I mean like, do they give of any distress chemicals and stuff. I am sitting here shivering and imagining them crawling all over the house.
Anyway, anyone had experience of these gargangtuan monster insects and am I right to be fearful?
I have just killed the biggest bee type creature I have ever seen in my life. It was in our yard when I pulled up and almost flew in the car widow. It seemed pissed right off by the car and kept dive bombing it. I ran away leaving the keys in the car. I had to attack it with a broom and it took some killing.
It is about an inch long dead, alive it looked as big as my thumb. I have googled it and am wondering if it could be a queen yellowjacket? A site I found said they tend to be half inch long while the queen is almost an inch (this is an inch at least). What I am wondering is - and this may sound dumb but I have a total phobia of bees and especially wasps and even more especially dinosaur sized wasps!!! - is there any way it's buddies could know it is dead and start looking for revenge or something, I mean like, do they give of any distress chemicals and stuff. I am sitting here shivering and imagining them crawling all over the house.
Anyway, anyone had experience of these gargangtuan monster insects and am I right to be fearful?
i swell up if i get stung, very frightening.
#155
In the woods in Missouri. There's all kinds of bugs and vermin here that you have to get used to. We don't even use bug or tick spray, it's too much of a PITA as we'd have to wear it 24-7. We just pull 'em off as we get them.
I am looking forward to Fall and Winter when I can go outside without things crawling all over me.
I am looking forward to Fall and Winter when I can go outside without things crawling all over me.
#156
In the woods in Missouri. There's all kinds of bugs and vermin here that you have to get used to. We don't even use bug or tick spray, it's too much of a PITA as we'd have to wear it 24-7. We just pull 'em off as we get them.
I am looking forward to Fall and Winter when I can go outside without things crawling all over me.
I am looking forward to Fall and Winter when I can go outside without things crawling all over me.
#157
I've been put right off going into the woods after a guy I work with got bitten by something nasty on a training exercise with the marine reserves in Tennessee. he noticed a huge bump appearing on his shoulder and figure it was just a mosquito bite he'd had a bad reaction to. He only got worried when the bite began to visibly wriggle a few days after he got back. Not being the sort to run to the doctors every time he felt under the weather, he poked a knife into the now rather large boil on his shoulder and produced a large white grub/larva/maggot of some description. He said he's not going back into the woods either and preferred it in Iraq where the low humidity meant no mosquitoes!
#159
Actually, I like short sleeves and shorts. It's easier to remove a tick on your legs or arms when you can see them. Nothing worse than having to stop what you're doing and drop your jeans when you feel a tick on the inside of your thigh heading north!

BTW, your area is relatively free of nasty stuff.
Last edited by another bloody yank; Jul 16th 2007 at 2:33 am.
#160
*vows never to go within a mile of the woods again, which isnt too hard living in Chicago*
#161
I've been put right off going into the woods after a guy I work with got bitten by something nasty on a training exercise with the marine reserves in Tennessee. he noticed a huge bump appearing on his shoulder and figure it was just a mosquito bite he'd had a bad reaction to. He only got worried when the bite began to visibly wriggle a few days after he got back. Not being the sort to run to the doctors every time he felt under the weather, he poked a knife into the now rather large boil on his shoulder and produced a large white grub/larva/maggot of some description. He said he's not going back into the woods either and preferred it in Iraq where the low humidity meant no mosquitoes!

Actually, I like short sleeves and shorts. It's easier to remove a tick on your legs or arms when you can see them. Nothing worse than having to stop what you're doing and drop your jeans when you feel a tick on the inside of your thigh heading north! 
BTW, your area is relatively free of nasty stuff.

BTW, your area is relatively free of nasty stuff.
If I felt one doing that I'd drop my jeans even if I was in the middle of a mall, but glad my area is OK
#162
I've been put right off going into the woods after a guy I work with got bitten by something nasty on a training exercise with the marine reserves in Tennessee. he noticed a huge bump appearing on his shoulder and figure it was just a mosquito bite he'd had a bad reaction to. He only got worried when the bite began to visibly wriggle a few days after he got back. Not being the sort to run to the doctors every time he felt under the weather, he poked a knife into the now rather large boil on his shoulder and produced a large white grub/larva/maggot of some description. He said he's not going back into the woods either and preferred it in Iraq where the low humidity meant no mosquitoes!
#163
One of the plusses of keeping chickens is that they eat ticks.
#165
not like that 
Loads of midges (mossies) in Scotland though, they all love my hair for some reason and I'm a constant source of amusement for my OH as they all seem to swarm above my head and move with me and leave him alone
I do remember something quite big sucking on my arm my OH said it was a horse fly (I think) and couldn't get it to stop sucking on me ..I felt it..urgh.

Loads of midges (mossies) in Scotland though, they all love my hair for some reason and I'm a constant source of amusement for my OH as they all seem to swarm above my head and move with me and leave him alone

I do remember something quite big sucking on my arm my OH said it was a horse fly (I think) and couldn't get it to stop sucking on me ..I felt it..urgh.




