@JP Steve: I was also going to comment that is a great drawing of a bumble bee, but you beat me to it. And, yes, we must do something about the dying out that are affecting bees. Without bees we would lose a great percentage of our food supply.
“Was you ever stung by a dead bee?” (To Have and Have Not). I was, as a child. Stepped on a dead bee in someone’s gravel drive in my bare feet…never even saw it, but it stung me. That’s when I learned I was allergic to bee venom.
Last year bees made a lovely hive in our apricot tree. No one in our old neighborhood uses pesticides, bud sadly, the bees were gone by this summer and I have very few bees in my garden. Luckily, our community garden a few blocks away has been buzzing all summer.
Accurate representation of a kid’s reasoning- (i.e. lack of perception of consequences for actions) impulsivity, and POV regarding the (unexpected) danger.
I seen a movie once where they set up jet fighters from the RAF to shoot down some giant radioactive mutant house flies. (I think it may have been on the show “Dr. Who” if I remember right)
Was more than likely a wasp, and I know that’s probably a honey bee, I kept thinking it was more of a yellow jacket. Those little buggers are more related to wasps than bees, and they can sting.
I’d been “harpooned” once by a wasp. I was under the back deck, getting my bicycle (it was high enough off the ground I could just bend down to get up under there) and I didn’t see the wasp’s nest under construction right overhead. Next thing I know there’s this sharp stinging in my left shoulder, and I run inside. My dad grabs the spray and kills the wasp, then applies some ointment for the stinging. We had been cleaning up my great-granddad’s old farm house, and he had an old double-wide in the back for storage. Wasps had taken up residence, and my dad, who was doing most of the cleaning, had been stung a few times. After getting the spray and ointment, he bought a few bug bombs and bombed the ever-lovin’ blank out of that trailer. We used it as a makeshift “barn” when we moved into the old farmhouse and had a few horses.
Calvin needs to be told that Africanized honey bees attack by the hundreds and pursue for hundreds of yards. If Calvin lives in the South, there is a good chance that hitting a nest with a rock could result in death.
If you have ever seen a wasp suck out the insides of a tomato worm (yuck) you would know they too are our friends and deserve to be left alone, little boys notwithstanding.
ratlum over 11 years ago
A bee that big would scare anybody
rentier over 11 years ago
Don’t chase bees! They are busy honey collectors!
JP Steve Premium Member over 11 years ago
That’s a pretty good honeybee drawing, but I bet Calvin was reacting to a wasp nest. Calvin shouldn’t hate bees, they are our friends!
Jogger2 over 11 years ago
Wasps are our friends, too. And the bees are in trouble. They could use our help.
vwdualnomand over 11 years ago
must be one of those japanese giant hornet.
arye uygur over 11 years ago
@JP Steve: I was also going to comment that is a great drawing of a bumble bee, but you beat me to it. And, yes, we must do something about the dying out that are affecting bees. Without bees we would lose a great percentage of our food supply.
orinoco womble over 11 years ago
“Was you ever stung by a dead bee?” (To Have and Have Not). I was, as a child. Stepped on a dead bee in someone’s gravel drive in my bare feet…never even saw it, but it stung me. That’s when I learned I was allergic to bee venom.
rentier over 11 years ago
Wasps have their place in nature, but they are not so helpful like bees.
dustspecks Premium Member over 11 years ago
Bee careful out there, Calvin!
Aaberon over 11 years ago
I was just sharing this information yesterday…
jessegooddoggy over 11 years ago
Last year bees made a lovely hive in our apricot tree. No one in our old neighborhood uses pesticides, bud sadly, the bees were gone by this summer and I have very few bees in my garden. Luckily, our community garden a few blocks away has been buzzing all summer.
Thomas Scott Roberts creator over 11 years ago
Accurate representation of a kid’s reasoning- (i.e. lack of perception of consequences for actions) impulsivity, and POV regarding the (unexpected) danger.
PatrickASL over 11 years ago
Silly, Calvin. There’s no need to track the bee on radar. When a bee stings someone, the bee dies. (Except the queen, who can sting more than once.)
sbchamp over 11 years ago
Ray Harryhausen approves
fixer1967 over 11 years ago
I seen a movie once where they set up jet fighters from the RAF to shoot down some giant radioactive mutant house flies. (I think it may have been on the show “Dr. Who” if I remember right)
Raygun over 11 years ago
(to Chicken of the Sea tune)“Ask any gardener you happen to see…Who’s the best pollinator?A big ’ol honey bee!”
Bing43 over 11 years ago
I agree, we should help the bees. Send your donation of $50.00 or more to………ME!
marshalljpeters Premium Member over 11 years ago
I’m surprised only one bee got him, if he attacked the nest. But he doesn’t need to worry about that one anymore. Bees are kamikazes.
PatrickRsGhost over 11 years ago
Was more than likely a wasp, and I know that’s probably a honey bee, I kept thinking it was more of a yellow jacket. Those little buggers are more related to wasps than bees, and they can sting.
I’d been “harpooned” once by a wasp. I was under the back deck, getting my bicycle (it was high enough off the ground I could just bend down to get up under there) and I didn’t see the wasp’s nest under construction right overhead. Next thing I know there’s this sharp stinging in my left shoulder, and I run inside. My dad grabs the spray and kills the wasp, then applies some ointment for the stinging. We had been cleaning up my great-granddad’s old farm house, and he had an old double-wide in the back for storage. Wasps had taken up residence, and my dad, who was doing most of the cleaning, had been stung a few times. After getting the spray and ointment, he bought a few bug bombs and bombed the ever-lovin’ blank out of that trailer. We used it as a makeshift “barn” when we moved into the old farmhouse and had a few horses.
Aaron Saltzer over 11 years ago
Gosh. I thought Calvin was smarter than that.
Phapada over 11 years ago
are you sure don’t see bees…….
s2ndsight over 11 years ago
Calvin needs to be told that Africanized honey bees attack by the hundreds and pursue for hundreds of yards. If Calvin lives in the South, there is a good chance that hitting a nest with a rock could result in death.
CrystalGuardian over 11 years ago
Don’t bees die after they sting people?
InuYugiHakusho over 11 years ago
Calvin’s imagination blows everything out of proportion.
Karaboo2 over 11 years ago
Been there, stung that.
Number Three over 11 years ago
The other day a bee buzzed in my ear and I screamed.
Well I should have expected it… I was near flowers.
Poor Calvin…
xxx
cosman over 11 years ago
One of those Fukushima bees..
kaigun over 11 years ago
There was a great Soup to Nutz recently-“What kind of person fills a pinata with bees?”
ratlum over 11 years ago
Thats why I carry Crest tooth paste when working in the woods.
Hawthorne over 11 years ago
Uh oh … beware the effects of unintended consequences! lol!
addictedtocomics over 11 years ago
If you have ever seen a wasp suck out the insides of a tomato worm (yuck) you would know they too are our friends and deserve to be left alone, little boys notwithstanding.
trelian5 over 11 years ago
I got stung on the chin bone by a wasp today
TrulyEpic0914 over 11 years ago
I’m sure they’ll find it!
RandomLantern445 about 4 years ago
Why would Calvin ever do that?