Here are some things to do if you encounter killer bees;
To get a killer bee's stinger out:
- scrape the stinger out with a credit card
- DO NOT attempt to pull a killer bee's stinger out, that will increase venom flow and swelling
- After stinger is removed, IMMEDIATELY apply ice and bee sting ointment (such as baking soda or baking powder mixed with water)
- Wrap it loosely, but firmly in something soft, like a cotton pad
If killer bees are attacking your pet:
- hose the pet down with water
- get the pet inside
- make the pet roll around
If you are being chased by killer bees:
- Run away and find shelter
- DO NOT jump into water, the bees will wait for you to resurface
To prevent the risk of being chased by killer bees:
- don't use lawnmowers or noisy mechanical devices around killer bees' hives
- Africanized bees hate high pitched noises
- don't spill or drink fruit juice around killer bees or their hives
To calm killer bees:
- somehow make smoke
- DO NOT use steam (it makes the bees wings wet, and it makes them mad)
To defend yourself from them:
- spray yourself with water
- cover yourself in a non-bee-infested blanket
How to identify killer bees:
- killer bees are smaller than their cousins, the common European honey-bee
- Killer bees fly up to 500 miles per hour ( 804.7 kilometers per hour)
- The queen lives 3 years
Resources: here, here, and here
For news or more information about killer bees, some interesting stories are here, here,and here. A man was stung 1,000 times, but later recovered.The Boca Raton News says:
"...Africanized honey bees don't have a stronger venom than the native honey bee -- but do usually sting in greater numbers, swarm more often than native honey bees, and defend the hive more rapidly than the native honey bee, thus, the reports of greater stings and hospitalizations -- and in extremely rare cases death...In fact, the experts say that for a normal, healthy person to receive a deadly dose of bee venom, it would take about 10 stings for each pound of body weight, or 1,500 stings at once for a 150-pound person, according to Dr. John Jackman at Texas A&M University..."
Everybody hates killer bees. But the bee species deserves some tough guys, doesn't it? And these honey bees are prey not hunter.
TECHNORATI TAGS: KILLER BEES, UNITED STATES, MONTANA, COLORADO, BOCA RATON, FLORIDA, AFRICA, BRAZIL, SAFETY TIPS
9 comments:
Good advice: Should I find myself being attacked by 3,000 small wet bees flying at 500 mph, I will quickly pull out my Arm & Hammer coated credit card and bee-proof blanket while running away and trying to convince Fido to roll -- Roll Fido! For Aunt Bee's Sake, ROLL!
Now that the killer bees are loose and cross-mating furiously, is there any prospect that the hybrids will eventually lose their aggressiveness?
My recollection is that the original plan was to breed a more honey-productive strain of bees. Although the experiment got out of hand, did it work? Are the hybrids really more productive? Or do we know?
I'm not sure I could recognize a killer bee from your description. Before it is too late, that is.
A bunch of us were running through the forest out on the Makah reservation when I was a kid. The trick was to run and jump till someone fell. Whapping the guy behind you with a branch was a big score. So it was a surprise to turn around and Wham! I head-butted a bee's nest right in the old kisser. The Indian guys started laughing as the surprise wore off and my leading position quickly became a trailing one. Bees tend to focus on first flesh, so the game became one in which they moved as slow as they could while keeping poor me running interference. I learned geometric equations painfully fast.
Turns out i made some moves toward Indian Manhood that day by not crying. It translates into something like "Serious Man". Every time I failed to pronounce my 'esses' had them falling over laughing. We headed down to the crick and started smearing mud on all the stings. It worked. The real clowns tried to use poison ivy leaves, but I knew about that. Didn't matter anyway, since it quits bothering you after the first time.
Jj
A bunch of us were running through the forest out on the Makah reservation when I was a kid. The trick was to run and jump till someone fell. Whapping the guy behind you with a branch was a big score. So it was a surprise to turn around and Wham! I head-butted a bee's nest right in the old kisser. The Indian guys started laughing as the surprise wore off and my leading position quickly became a trailing one. Bees tend to focus on first flesh, so the game became one in which they moved as slow as they could while keeping poor me running interference. I learned geometric equations painfully fast.
Turns out i made some moves toward Indian Manhood that day by not crying. It translates into something like "Serious Man". Every time I failed to pronounce my 'esses' had them falling over laughing. We headed down to the crick and started smearing mud on all the stings. It worked. The real clowns tried to use poison ivy leaves, but I knew about that. Didn't matter anyway, since it quits bothering you after the first time.
Jj
I've always found it frustrating that more people don't take killer bees seriously. I mean, they kill you. But there were all of those movies in the '70s that made it seem like a goofy concern somehow. Also, I think having years and years of warning about something makes people perversely unconcerned about things, just like the end of the world or our personal mortality. They told us about 40 years before hand that the bees would be here around the year 2000. I told someone that one time in the 90s and he say's "Oh, they've been saying that for years". No ****, that's because we've known ahead of time for that long, they're right on schedule! We probably could have stopped them at Panama, but noooo, someone would have had to be like Micheal Caine, and that's not coool. Like Bjork said, there is definitely, definitely, definitely no logic in human behavior.
WOw! Are they coming to Washington?
I always thought that an odd and frustrating thing about the killer bee situation is that the huge amount of advance warning they gave us somehow kept people from taking them seriously (that, and the killer bee movies). I remember that in the seventies, they always said that the bees would be here around the year 2000, and people kept acting like that meant they would never get here.
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