I might as well ask this since I got stung or bit by a bee yesterday during America day.

Last year, when taking strolls, it was rare enough for a bee to swarm around me that I could go whole strolls without it happening sometimes.

This year, they swarm around me everywhere. Everywhere. It’s like fighting your way through putty patrollers. They respawn instantly, there’s absolutely no lag. Shoo one away and one comes back five seconds later. Sometimes for three hour strolls encompassing six miles.

What the heck happened? Anyone else notice this?

  • AFK BRB Chocolate
    link
    English
    46 months ago

    I don’t believe there’s a venom difference. They got called “killer bees” because they tend to swarm people much more often than European, not because an individual sting is worse.

    With that reaction, and no stinger, are you sure it was a honey bee? They pretty much always leave a stinger.

    • Call me Lenny/LeniOPM
      link
      fedilink
      English
      26 months ago

      There’s a tiny, tiny black spot on my thumb, like the size of a dust mite due to how small it is. I’m lucky with my glasses I can even see it, but I don’t know if that’s the stinger or just a dent it left. The bee did fly away unharmed afterward.

      • Drusas
        link
        fedilink
        56 months ago

        It sounds like the stinger did not come out when you were stung, so you were probably stung by a wasp rather than a bee.

      • AFK BRB Chocolate
        link
        English
        46 months ago

        When the stinger comes out, it’s basically the whole back end of the bee. It’s kind of fiendish: the venom sack and a little muscle are in the very end of their butt. The stinger has a barb, so when they stick it in you, and you brush them off, the whole assembly rips off the bee and the muscle keeps pumping the venom into you. The bee dies.

        So it’s very obvious if the stinger came off.