View Full Version : 120,000 Hold Appartment Building Hostage
Mr. Anderson
Aug 17, 2004, 11:02 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/West/08/16/bees.reut/index.html
Wow, this is just nuts! Brings back memories, though, of pelting bee hives with rocks, base balls and other thrown objects. Never really got stung, though.
I can't imagine what the cloud of angry bees would have been like, though. Something right out of a horror movie :D And I know if I was a kid living there, I'd probably be one of the rock throwers....
The quarter-ton honeycomb, which may have accumulated inside the apartment wall for years, was so big it was threatening the structural integrity of the two-story building, Horner said.
And that's a lot of honey!
D
invaLPsion
Aug 17, 2004, 11:41 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/West/08/16/bees.reut/index.html
Wow, this is just nuts! Brings back memories, though, of pelting bee hives with rocks, base balls and other thrown objects. Never really got stung, though.
I can't imagine what the cloud of angry bees would have been like, though. Something right out of a horror movie :D And I know if I was a kid living there, I'd probably be one of the rock throwers....
D
Rocks?!!! :confused:
I preferred my trusty Tippmann 98... :D
That, or fireworks...
Never attacked a hive that big, though. ;)
emw
Aug 17, 2004, 11:52 AM
I'm no bee expert, but I'd think you'd hear 120,000 bees buzzing in your walls...
Stelliform
Aug 17, 2004, 11:54 AM
Wow, I guess these weren't killer bees. I can't believe no one noticed the hive before, or if they did notice, why didn't someone take care of it before it grew to 500 lbs!
iJon
Aug 17, 2004, 12:21 PM
give me a beesuit, some gasoline and a lighter and im good to go.
iJon
mikeyredk
Aug 17, 2004, 12:34 PM
give me a beesuit, some gasoline and a lighter and im good to go.
iJon
and you will become a pin cushion in no time. with that many bees you might want to get a space suit. Yes!! a space suit, bee suits sometimes fail and you get stung
iJon
Aug 17, 2004, 12:56 PM
and you will become a pin cushion in no time. with that many bees you might want to get a space suit. Yes!! a space suit, bee suits sometimes fail and you get stung
welll it was a cool thought anyways.
iJon
Mr. Anderson
Aug 17, 2004, 01:51 PM
You guys are thinking way too small here...
you need one of these (http://www.grunts.net/album/usmc/usmc43.html) :eek: :D
D
ExoticFish
Aug 17, 2004, 02:30 PM
You guys are thinking way too small here...
you need one of these (http://www.grunts.net/album/usmc/usmc43.html) :eek: :D
D
WOW... where do i put my credit card info? :D
Mr. Anderson
Aug 17, 2004, 02:32 PM
WOW... where do i put my credit card info? :D
army surplus flame thrower...I'm sure if you search around in ebay long enough one would show up :D
D
wdlove
Aug 17, 2004, 02:38 PM
You guys are thinking way too small here...
you need one of these (http://www.grunts.net/album/usmc/usmc43.html) :eek: :D
D
I guess that you are willing to sacrifice the two story building in the process also. Just glad that 80,000 were saved by a beekeeper. Wonder what happened to the honey?
I disturbed a yellow jacket nest once. It was in a sign, didn't realize they were there. They chased me all the way back to my grandmothers house. I got stung a couple of times.
yellow
Aug 17, 2004, 03:24 PM
Wow. My wife FREAKS and SCAMPERS at even the hint of a buzz. She probably would have had a mental breakdown and sat rocking in a corner. Me, I don't mind bees. But I've never faced down 120,000 of them and their 1/4 ton hive. Wow.
Inspector Lee
Aug 17, 2004, 05:20 PM
If only someone had video footage of the immense black cloud and the ensuing sprint. I keep envisioning something on the level of Steve Buscemi in the beginning of Reservoir Dogs - full tilt.
Nothing like the adrenaline rush you get from a hive attack. Ahhh youth...
Mr. Anderson
Aug 17, 2004, 05:24 PM
Nothing like the adrenaline rush you get from a hive attack. Ahhh youth...
But its not just the adrenaline - its something you rarely get as an adult, or I should say *should* rarely feel. That fun, stupid adrenaline rush when you get all pumped up because you know you have done something devilishly idiotic and wrong on purpose ;)
D
stoid
Aug 17, 2004, 05:29 PM
I'm no bee expert, but I'd think you'd hear 120,000 bees buzzing in your walls...
Three words: Los Angeles traffic. :D
krimson
Aug 17, 2004, 05:41 PM
You guys are thinking way too small here...
you need one of these (http://www.grunts.net/album/usmc/usmc43.html) :eek: :D
D
2 cans of Triflouroethane (TFE or DFE) aka canned air. Flip it upside down, spray into the entrance. That should freeze enough of them to block escape, then you pump the other can in, light it, and watch all the oxygen get sucked out.
Mr. Anderson
Aug 17, 2004, 06:00 PM
2 cans of Triflouroethane (TFE or DFE) aka canned air. Flip it upside down, spray into the entrance. That should freeze enough of them to block escape, then you pump the other can in, light it, and watch all the oxygen get sucked out.
You'd still have to manage to get close to this mega hive. I'm sure that one of this size would have a huge entrance to accommodate all the bees coming and going....
D
virividox
Aug 17, 2004, 06:17 PM
yikes thats terrifying!!!
wdlove
Aug 17, 2004, 09:06 PM
This would be a very important thing for those involved with the bees if they have an allergy.
Study: Allergy Shots Reduce Reactions To Bee Stings
Doctor Recommends Shots For People Who Don't Outgrow Insect Allergy
POSTED: 12:06 pm EDT August 16, 2004
Summertime can bring additional risks for children who are allergic to bee stings. But the good news is that most kinds outgrow such allergies
http://www.thebostonchannel.com/health/3656824/detail.html?treets=bos&tml=bos_health&ts=T&tmi=bos_health_1_12150008172004
Raid
Aug 18, 2004, 12:08 AM
You guys are thinking way too small here...
you need one of these (http://www.grunts.net/album/usmc/usmc43.html) :eek: :D
D
Don't forget one of these (http://www.nfb.ca/grizzly/suit.html), one would assume that it's better than some flimsy netting around your head!
Capn_Moho
Aug 18, 2004, 12:46 AM
army surplus flame thrower...I'm sure if you search around in ebay long enough one would show up :D
*sniff*
Reminds me of Metroid Prime.
I want pictures of the hive.
I'll trade pictures of flames shooting out of my apartment building for anyone who can find them!
Capn_Moho
Aug 18, 2004, 12:53 AM
http://www.seacoastonline.com/2003news/exeter/10102003/news/54597.htm
It must have weighed close to 5 pounds (2.27 kg)!
Inspector Lee
Aug 18, 2004, 11:45 AM
But its not just the adrenaline - its something you rarely get as an adult, or I should say *should* rarely feel. That fun, stupid adrenaline rush when you get all pumped up because you know you have done something devilishly idiotic and wrong on purpose ;)
D
It seems humans (and their primate relatives) are the only species in possession of the "f*** with factor" and this hive attack is just one of many examples. I remember fishing as a kid with some friends and a huge turtle popped its head out of the water about 20 yards from shore. Instantly, and I repeat instantly, we were scrambling for rocks, bricks, sticks, logs - anything with mass (roll sound of pond splashings).
I may be wrong but raccoons don't storm packed 4th of July patios just for the hell of it. Nor do bears enter towns or campgrounds unless they are hungry. Crocs will take to backyard pools if they need to cool off, not to scare the bejesus out of some lavender-panted geriatric Floridian. :D
comictimes
Aug 18, 2004, 12:31 PM
Study: Allergy Shots Reduce Reactions To Bee Stings
Doctor Recommends Shots For People Who Don't Outgrow Insect Allergy
POSTED: 12:06 pm EDT August 16, 2004
Summertime can bring additional risks for children who are allergic to bee stings. But the good news is that most kinds outgrow such allergies
umm... isn't that the point of allergy shots :confused:
But yeah, I generally don't mind bees all that much, but that many of them would be really creepy. In 5th grade, there was one of the underground nests, and someone I knew stepped on it and kept his foot there for like 5 minutes... those bees (yellowjackets? wasps? I can't remember...) were not happy...
krimson
Aug 18, 2004, 03:17 PM
Update:
LA Times reports that officals have confirmed that there were actually 3 connnected hive complexes, and that the bees were africanized. A dog that was tied to a nearby tree was stung over 100 times and died on friday.
wdlove
Aug 18, 2004, 03:25 PM
umm... isn't that the point of allergy shots :confused:
But yeah, I generally don't mind bees all that much, but that many of them would be really creepy. In 5th grade, there was one of the underground nests, and someone I knew stepped on it and kept his foot there for like 5 minutes... those bees (yellowjackets? wasps? I can't remember...) were not happy...
If a person is allergic, just 5 bees could send them into anaphylactic, which could lead to death if not treated quickly. Some carry an epinephrine quick syringe just in case.
I hope that your fellow student was wearing a shoe. If they were yellow jackets they would have taught him a lesson.
yellow
Aug 18, 2004, 03:26 PM
the bees were africanized.
Whoa. Everyone there got LUCKY. Africanized bees are no joke.
Poor dog :(
mikeyredk
Aug 18, 2004, 03:45 PM
Whoa. Everyone there got LUCKY. Africanized bees are no joke.
Poor dog :(
yea those bees will chase you and chase you. if you go underwater they will wait for you to reemerge
Makosuke
Aug 18, 2004, 04:54 PM
Yikes, that's like something out of a horror movie, and sounds like it might be even worse than the bee stories posted here a little while ago. Gives me the willies just thinking about it.
I've been attacked by a small swarm of yellowjackets for absolutely no reason before (bees, I don't mind; wasps, they're just plain mean), but I was only stung a half dozen or so times.
Gotta say, though, my personal biggest creep-out are those giant wasps they have in Japan--saw one in person once, and the thing was like two inches long. Still makes me shudder just thinking about that monstrosity.
Link: http://www.muenster.org/hornissenschutz/manda.htm
homerjward
Aug 18, 2004, 11:17 PM
2 cans of Triflouroethane (TFE or DFE) aka canned air. Flip it upside down, spray into the entrance. That should freeze enough of them to block escape, then you pump the other can in, light it, and watch all the oxygen get sucked out.
axe and a zippo.
or...http://en.wikipedia.org/upload/e/e0/Nagasakibomb.jpg
vBulletin® v3.6.10, Copyright ©2000-2009, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.