"THERE WERE STILL MORE BEES ON THE SWINGSET. CALL IN REINFORCEMENTS. 2 QUARTS OF 87 OCTANE GASOLINE REPORTING FOR DUTY SIR!"
"OH DEAR LORD ITS SO BEAUTIFUL. I AM SO PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN RIGHT NOW."
LOVFL @ Quote"THERE WERE STILL MORE BEES ON THE SWINGSET. CALL IN REINFORCEMENTS. 2 QUARTS OF 87 OCTANE GASOLINE REPORTING FOR DUTY SIR!"and.....Quote"OH DEAR LORD ITS SO BEAUTIFUL. I AM SO PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN RIGHT NOW."and choxlate_saltfish sig REALLLL F@#KIN BADDDD!!!!She never see tha hard cuff comin LOLP.S. incase yuh wondering what 'LOVFL' is: Laughin Out Very F@#kin Loud
Dat was mad.. but he lucky it wasn't japanese hornets... anyone see those UNNATURAL looking insects on NGC??? its was scary.. Imagine a hornet the size of a small RAT (yeah yuh heard right say like 5" in length) that you CAN'T outrun, that can sting at will as many time as they like without dying and the venom in their stinger is SO potent that it liquifies HUMAN TISSUE.... yeah yuh heard right, it will dissolve your muscle, skin, etc. If yuh think that was Beemagedeon... check this... 30 Japanese hornets took out a hive of honey bees... 30,000 honey bees dead... in 15 mins... BEAT THAT...
Although a handful of Asian giant hornets can easily defeat the defenses of honey bees, whose correspondingly small sting cannot inflict much damage against such a large predator as the giant hornet, the Japanese honey bee (Apis cerana japonica) has evolved a method of defending against the much larger predator.When a hornet scout locates a Japanese honey bee hive and approaches the nest, the scout will emit specific pheromonal hunting signals. When the honey bees detect these pheromones, a hundred or so will gather near the entrance of the nest and keep it open, apparently to draw the hornet further into the hive or allow it to enter on its own. As the hornet enters the nest, a large mob of about five hundred honey bees surround the hornet, completely covering it and preventing it from moving, and begin quickly vibrating their flight muscles. This has the effect of raising the temperature of the honey bee mass to 47 °C (117 °F). Though the honey bees can tolerate such a temperature, it is fatal to the intruder, which can handle a maximum temperature of about 45 °C (113 °F), and is effectively baked to death by the large mass of vibrating bees. Often several bees perish along with the intruder in this way, having sacrificed themselves for the survival of the colony