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Tractor Held Hostage

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37 chief

11-22-2005 14:30:47




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I was mowing today, I came to a matress someone had dumped in the field. I got off to move it, and as I turned it over I discovered a hive of bees under the matress. The bees went in to instant pissed off mode. I ran away with bees chasing me leaving the tractor running, and mower turning. The bees would not let me get back to my tractor. I found a towel in my truck and wrapped it around my head to protect my eyes. I finally got my tractor back, with only one bee sting on my arm. All in a day's work. Stan in calif.

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Coldiron

11-23-2005 07:21:18




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
The blessings of cold weather in North Idaho is that our bees are in bed for a few months. They catch up real fast for time lost in the summer though.



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Mike M

11-23-2005 05:28:59




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
NEVER GET OFF AND LEAVE THE MOWER RUNNING !!!!



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John A.

11-22-2005 20:32:22




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
37 chief, Got into a simular deal back in the summer while we had a guy dozeing fencelines for us. We smacked an ol dead tree with the dozer. I ran and he backed out a ways and then got off all the whilr fighting off bees. We had to let the dozer run for about 20 minutes, then we snuck back to shut it down. In the ordeal I got 3 hits and the operator got 6 stings. Not a red letter day!
He came back at hard dark, fired off the dozer and then pushed out the tree and associated brush. Not a bee came out after us The next day was Sunday so no work was done, Then Monday morning we finished off the area, no bees anywhere. So the dark thing does work!!!!
Later,
John A.

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Mark - IN.

11-22-2005 20:16:33




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
I saw this thing on...I think the discovery channel a couple of weeks ago on Africanized bees. Was pretty scarey stuff. I was surprised to learn that were up in LA. More surprised when these bee guys went into a quarantined section of the park and took down like a 150# hive. Most amazing was when introduced an few Africanized bees to what I guess are the normal everyday European honey bee nest, how rapidly they went from docile to instant follow the leader PO'd at anything and everything, especially the rumblings of a diesel engine.

I know what you mean about instant PO'd. Have some extra railroad ties for fence posts that I figured would box in on 3 sides, them fill with dirt to use for a ramp onto trailers or into pickup beds. Well, some yellow jackets burrowed in under the stack. When I scooted them over with a loader, holy cow they came out head hunting. I took off in reverse and they came after me for well over 100'. I waited until dusk, sneaked in with a long chain, wrapped around a tie, then dragged it way out away with a tractor. When I went to unhook the chain I flipped the tie and it was hollwed out with a big nest. They were pretty PO'd at me and got me a few times as I ran away, tractor still running. Meat tenderizer took the sting out right away, but only for a short time. Took a couple of days for the stings to stop burning. I don't know what eats yellow jackets, but gotta get me some of them.

Mark

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Roy Suomi

11-22-2005 20:08:03




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
There's only one kind of bee I like..... . BOO BEE's sorry ,I couldn't resist. glad to hear he's ok...



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wayne2

11-23-2005 11:27:08




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to Roy Suomi, 11-22-2005 20:08:03  
I like the thought of Bee"s Knees !!! LOL W



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Mike (WA)

11-22-2005 17:47:40




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
I was bush-hogging a field for a friend, and it seemed like every bee in the country lived there- I finally brought a sand-blasting hood, long gloves, and put rubber bands around my pantlegs and sleeves, and just mowed right over them. I didn't volunteer to do the field again.



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NC Wayne

11-22-2005 16:28:29




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
Heard about a guy a friend of ours knew that knocked over a dead tree with an excavator. Turns out the tree was hollow and full of honey bees. There were so many of them that when they swarmed he said then covered the cab and so many got into the intake they shut the engine down. He was deathly allergic to bee stings so it was a good thing it was the middle of summer and he had the cab door shut and the A/C on when it happened. Problem though was that it was the middle of summer and he was then stuck in the cab with everything shut and no A/C after the engine shut down. He waited til they settled down enough that he felt confident getting out then jumped and ran. Fortunately he didn't get stung.

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Jeff Oliver

11-22-2005 16:08:21




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
If it happens again and you can wait until after dark to get the tractor back do so. my dad swears by it as they won't come out and sting you at night. We have mowed around ground bee nests during the day and gone back at night and mowed right over them.



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rok85

11-22-2005 16:07:17




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
No disrepect, but it sure doesn't sound like a safe thing to get off the tractor and leave the mower running??



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37 chief

11-22-2005 16:22:39




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to rok85, 11-22-2005 16:07:17  
I get off in front of the rear wheels, and get back on the same way. No where near the spinning things. Stan



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no_brainer

11-22-2005 15:53:55




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
Had the same thing happen in a bobcat moving piles of lumber .



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Jay (ND)

11-22-2005 15:15:00




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
Move north - ours have been dormant for quiet a while already.



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supergrumpy

11-22-2005 15:14:55




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to 37 chief, 11-22-2005 14:30:47  
we got 2 inches of very cold rain that turned to snow, no bee problem in upstate NY

maybe you ought to move here



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37 chief

11-22-2005 15:27:05




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 Re: Tractor Held Hostage in reply to supergrumpy, 11-22-2005 15:14:55  
I was in Corning NY one time in the winter. No thanks, I will put up with the bees. Stan



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