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curlygirly99
· 9 years ago
· FIRST
Beesbeesbees.com
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petethepirate
· 9 years ago
I'm highly allergic but I love bees so much, I always save them. I think they're beautiful, and a vital part of the way nature runs too!
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guest
· 9 years ago
Bless you!
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deleted
· 9 years ago
Does anyone who has a pool constantly get bees flying into it? How do you save them quickly?
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cookiecorners
· 9 years ago
what we used to do is get like, a pool skimmer or a fish/butterfly net and scoop them out, then put them on something to dry. Now we just cover the pool, but still.
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youwillhateme
· 9 years ago
It's like you help him and he immediately stings when he gets the strength.
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xboxgorgo18
· 9 years ago
I think you're talking about a wasp not a bee
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Edited 9 years ago
youwillhateme
· 9 years ago
So a bee doesn't sting?
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xboxgorgo18
· 9 years ago
Bees sting you because you either trespass in their territory or desecrate their homes, wasps sting you even if it enters your territory and also for no reason at all
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youwillhateme
· 9 years ago
Your point being? I think your mistake was taking me serious.
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xboxgorgo18
· 9 years ago
Define serious in the land of the free
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the944
· 9 years ago
Did this with a hummingbird once - it actually worked!
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poyolove123
· 9 years ago
I tried to help a bee once but I didn't know if it was tired (it was on the ground) so I fenced it off to make sure that no one stepped on it and I fed it some sugar water and it started flying around me as if saying thanks I love bees now:)))))
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niriel
· 9 years ago
I found a bee on my doorstep two weeks ago, it was exhausted but alive. I remembered this post, gave it a try. It's eerie how well it worked; in one minute it went from barely able to bend a knee in slow motion to flying off over the bushes. I know bees are tiny but there's no way it had the time to digest anything. Maybe it was just very thirsty.
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