Phil Pascoe
Established Member
I knew the effect after the first sting - it nearly killed me.
Lonsdale73":12upi32i said:Some weeks later, a man from the local council's pest control division came to inspect the 'problem'. George and I were playing outside the front of the house when he arrived and minutes later he came tearing past us, with the swarm chasing him down the street. It really was like you see in kids cartoons, with so many of them giving chase it did look like he was being followed by a black cloud.
In the autumn as a child I used to amuse myself by putting my ferret in the greenhouse to catch the mice that were running round in circles, drunk on fermented grapes.Lons":2m617oeh said:I can't abide wasps especially in the autumn when they get intoxicated on our apples ...
Sheffield Tony":1re5en1b said:We used to have a complainy neighbour who had a noisy petrol mower. I would have taken up bee keeping if I had known
Lons":11ll8xul said:I can't abide wasps especially in the autumn when they get intoxicated on our apples the ones we get seem to be very aggressive so the electric zapper bat works overtime.
My neighbour keeps bees and twice a swam of them have chased me from the field up to the garden and stung me several times. The vibrations from the petrol mower apparently and fist occasion I had to let the mower run dry after 2 hours as I couldn't get near it.
Neighbour said "what's the problem, they don't sting", he was clad in a full sting proof suit at the time. :roll: :wink:
I wouldn't harm bees though and persuaded the neighbour to move the hives 50 yards from my boundary hedge.
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