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PrincessBandit
7th December 2007, 15:42
recently I did the return trip from Auck to Wanganui and my riding companion got stung in the neck by some suicidal bee. Thankfully it wasn't me as I'd have probably come off my bike with the fright! Made me think though that perhaps a tube of Bonjela or some other numbing stuff might be a good idea to carry in a pocket (small but ever so handy!). I know, someone out there might like to calculate the odds of kamikaze insects that take their revenge as they die hitting you in a tender place like the neck, and it probably is quite low. But you never know when it might happen to you. Anyway, just an idea.:rolleyes:

Nasty
7th December 2007, 15:43
recently I did the return trip from Auck to Wanganui and my riding companion got stung in the neck by some suicidal bee. Thankfully it wasn't me as I'd have probably come off my bike with the fright! Made me think though that perhaps a tube of Bonjela or some other numbing stuff might be a good idea to carry in a pocket (small but ever so handy!). I know, someone out there might like to calculate the odds of kamikaze insects that take their revenge as they die hitting you in a tender place like the neck, and it probably is quite low. But you never know when it might happen to you. Anyway, just an idea.:rolleyes:

Bonjela is for the mouth ain't it ... something like anatheisin works on insect stings.

yungatart
7th December 2007, 15:45
I got stung in the neck by a bumble bee a couple of years ago...it felt like an acid burn and was still swollen and itchy 3 weeks later.
I just called in to the pub and got some ice for it tho...

Usarka
7th December 2007, 15:53
If you're allergic to bee stings or wasp stings see your doctor and see if you can get a syringe of adrenaline to carry on the bike. Would suck being stung in the neck at 100kph.

if you're not allergic then its a bad day to post because it is KB HTFU day today. you also get hit by stones, ciggarettes, twigs, apples. Harden the fuck up! :lol:

hmmmm, adrenaline syringe.... i feel an allergy coming on :wacko:

ManDownUnder
7th December 2007, 15:59
...would suck being stung in the neck at 100kph.

... trust me you're right! If you need it then the ol adrenalin injection etc would be needed (this is beyond my knowledge but you all will know what's needed already I'd hope... and carry it with you).

For those of us that "SWELL" when stung, a sting to the neck can be dangerous and a piece of ice is needed. Gas Station or the nearest house is a good starting point.... and pronto.

vifferman
7th December 2007, 16:05
I've been stung only twice by bees when on the bike - the first was test-riding a bike without any gloves on, and a bee hit my hand, and stung me on the knuckle.

Before I got a helmet with a tinted visor a few years ago, I used to always ride with sunglasses on under the helmet, and the visor up. One morning on the way to work, I was only a hundred metres or so up the road, and a bee went in my helmet, hitting me in the nose. It seemed to take forever to pull over, take my gloves off, sunglasses off, undo helmet, take helmet off.

Too late. :pinch:

Luckily, the bee must've been stunned, and barely stung me, right on the tip of my nose, where the skin's thin over the cartilage. Hardly hurt at all.

I think the worst would have to be wasps - I've only had a run-in with them once, and was stung several times on the back of the neck. Felt like I'd been hit in the neck with a four-by-two. :eek:

Mom
7th December 2007, 16:13
Getting stung is the worst thing. I employed a mechanic years ago that had the hell allergy to bees. He carried the adrenalin pen at all times. Never forget the time he came back to the workshop gasping and pointing at his pocket!

Yes we got his pen, and yes he got the shot! Far canal, once he recovered I bollicked him big time, his excuse for turning up like that...


I was too close to the shop to stop!

I hate stinging things, have had the trusty hornet inside my helmet before today, thankfully never been stung.

If not allergic then ice is the way to go as others have said. If you really want to provide for this kind of emergency, carry a tube of anthistan cream with you. Works well for wasp stings that go on, and on, and on!

magicfairy
7th December 2007, 16:28
Get some "stingose" gel or cream from chemist.
Carry with you.
Apply as soon as you get insect bite, sting and it will greatly reduce the reaction. Must be applied ASAP and every couple of hours after that. It actually stops the reaction that causes the swelling, itchiness.

PrincessBandit
7th December 2007, 16:32
if you're not allergic then its a bad day to post because it is KB HTFU day today. you also get hit by stones, ciggarettes, twigs, apples. Harden the fuck up! :lol:

Yep, had stones flick up into my neck too. No apples though, hmmmmmmm. And I wasn't aware that it was HTFU day, I'll keep that in mind lol Don't want to harden up too much though, might sprout a pair of balls and I wouldn't want that to happen!:lol:

Katman
7th December 2007, 17:09
Just wait till they find out who the 'riding companion' was. Any ounce of sympathy will evapourate in a heartbeat.:msn-wink:

Kickaha
7th December 2007, 20:17
Would suck being stung in the neck at 100kph.


It sucks at 160kph as well

sunhuntin
7th December 2007, 20:28
honey works well for bee stings.
ive been got three times now while riding. one was in paeroa when i went into town. pressed my leg against the tank and got stung [what the hell a bee was doing up that late ill never know!]
second was at about 100k, bee flew into the helmet padding. went to flick it out and it stung my second finger. ever tried pulling a brake with essentially only one finger!
third one got stuck in my jacket collar. turned my head at a giveway and it got me.
also had one flew up inside the full face i was wearing. major panic... pull over gloves off, sit wondering how to remove lid. in the end just opened the visor and it found its own way out. bees are HUGE when they are inside a helmet with you!

each time ive applied honey and the swelling has reduced hugely and no itching.

Renegade
8th December 2007, 14:46
honey works well for bee stings.
ive been got three times now while riding. one was in paeroa when i went into town. pressed my leg against the tank and got stung [what the hell a bee was doing up that late ill never know!]
second was at about 100k, bee flew into the helmet padding. went to flick it out and it stung my second finger. ever tried pulling a brake with essentially only one finger!
third one got stuck in my jacket collar. turned my head at a giveway and it got me.
also had one flew up inside the full face i was wearing. major panic... pull over gloves off, sit wondering how to remove lid. in the end just opened the visor and it found its own way out. bees are HUGE when they are inside a helmet with you!

each time ive applied honey and the swelling has reduced hugely and no itching.

is that a no to the bonjella and a yes to the jar of honey??

Steam
8th December 2007, 14:51
Here's a quote from my motorcycle touring blog, when about a month ago I got 261 bites. No stings thankfully.


oooh! I hate bitey things!
I have got 161 bite marks. One Hundred and Sixty One.
I actually think I counted 261, but then I couldn't quite believe it and couldn't be bothered counting again so 161 is conservative. I have at least 161 bites. But probably 261.

Mostly on my feet and legs, must've been something leaping up from the grass or something, rather than mosquitos, who you'd think would bite generally everywhere.
Now I am itching madly! And trying not to itch the bites.
I will go to the chemist and buy some vitamin B1 maybe. Or just eat lots of Marmite. Repellent just isn't cutting it.

Tuesday: A new kind of bug bit me during the night and I now have six big lumps. The lumps are yellow and a few inches across and one of them is blistered. Yuk! But they are just itchy, not painful, so it's not dangerous.

DAMN BUGS! What am I doing wrong? Maybe I just need to stop sleeping in a tent.

sunhuntin
8th December 2007, 15:24
is that a no to the bonjella and a yes to the jar of honey??

im not sure that bonjella works outside the mouth, and honey on really works on bee stings. youd be better to get one of the thingys suggested above that you use right after the sting and that stops all the symptoms of a sting. the one magicfairy suggested.

ElCoyote
8th December 2007, 16:00
... trust me you're right! If you need it then the ol adrenalin injection etc would be needed (this is beyond my knowledge but you all will know what's needed already I'd hope... and carry it with you).

For those of us that "SWELL" when stung, a sting to the neck can be dangerous and a piece of ice is needed. Gas Station or the nearest house is a good starting point.... and pronto.

That's me. 10 years of riding when helmets weren't compulsory I didn't get stung but when I took up golf got stung on the furtherest hole from the clubhouse when cell phones were like rockinghorse shit. Luckily there was there was a golf cart nearby that was commandeered. I was unconcious by then but appreciate the closeness of a major. Riding bikes among cages is tame by comparison.

:niceone:

BiK3RChiK
1st April 2008, 13:18
Freakin wasps and shit! The road workers at Te Maunga near Tauranga must have stirred up a big nest, because riding through there was damn near lethal!!

Now, I just had something (never did find it!) fly down my front as I was riding home from town and I have 3 nice stings/bites on my tummy!! Arrrrgh!!!!!

breakaway
1st April 2008, 14:43
1. Harden up
2. Cover every part of body and pray they don't get pushed into the vent and then out in front of your face

kevfromcoro
1st April 2008, 15:05
Got stung by my fishbait,,,was out surfcasting and reeled the line in...from the time the bait left the water and up a 2 mtr bank ,, a bee landed on it....... grabed the bait and it stung me..
Did get 6 nice snapz to take home though..
was worth it.

gunnyrob
1st April 2008, 16:01
One of the advantages of using a flip front helmet is being able to get rid of unwanted passengers tout suite....

EJK
1st April 2008, 16:04
Once a moth got stuck here on my Flip-up Helmet.

I was scared

mattian
2nd April 2008, 15:39
recently I did the return trip from Auck to Wanganui and my riding companion got stung in the neck by some suicidal bee. Thankfully it wasn't me as I'd have probably come off my bike with the fright! Made me think though that perhaps a tube of Bonjela or some other numbing stuff might be a good idea to carry in a pocket (small but ever so handy!). I know, someone out there might like to calculate the odds of kamikaze insects that take their revenge as they die hitting you in a tender place like the neck, and it probably is quite low. But you never know when it might happen to you. Anyway, just an idea.:rolleyes:

I am always getting "bombed" by bees and other flying insects while I am riding along minding my own business..... Thankfully, I have never been stung, they usually just bounce off my helmet or visor harmlessly with a little "thump" sound........ although.... one day, I was slowing down for a round about and a bee flew into my face.... landed on my cheek on slowly walked his way up underneath my sunglasses and settled on my closed eyelid !!! so... there I was pulling out of a round about.... with a bee sitting smack in the middle of my closed eyelid!! I pulled out of the round about slowly and a little further down the road calmy pulled up to a stop took off my glasses and off he went. I were wrap around goggles now :blink:

Biggles2000
3rd April 2008, 09:07
I'm allergic as well. I just carry std antihistamine all the brands in the chemist seem to work as well as any others. It does mean after being stung I have take a couple of pills and sit down quietly for a few hours, if I don’t I run around like a mad thing and swell up. Also the area around the sting tends to die and turn black.

Rogue
6th April 2008, 22:04
Dito to what Biggles2000 said

"I'm allergic as well. I just carry std antihistamine all the brands in the chemist seem to work as well as any others. It does mean after being stung I have take a couple of pills and sit down quietly for a few hours, if I don’t I run around like a mad thing and swell up. Also the area around the sting tends to die and turn black."

90s
7th April 2008, 11:33
Dito to what Biggles2000 said

"I'm allergic as well. I just carry std antihistamine all the brands in the chemist seem to work as well as any others. It does mean after being stung I have take a couple of pills and sit down quietly for a few hours, if I don’t I run around like a mad thing and swell up. Also the area around the sting tends to die and turn black."

I'd go with some teetree oil (good for all bites, general stuff etc) & some antihistamine tabs (a few zirtecs) because you don't want your eyes puffing up and watering should anything kick an allergic reaction of (pollen for the eyes etc).

I was riding with some people a few years ago and one guy was stung in the eye by a bee. I have always been a bit paranoid about that since, because he wasn't very happy although as a mega-hard fella he grinned and bore it. Not how I would've coped at all.

BiK3RChiK
7th April 2008, 17:42
I'd go with some teetree oil (good for all bites, general stuff etc) & some antihistamine tabs (a few zirtecs) because you don't want your eyes puffing up and watering should anything kick an allergic reaction of (pollen for the eyes etc).

I was riding with some people a few years ago and one guy was stung in the eye by a bee. I have always been a bit paranoid about that since, because he wasn't very happy although as a mega-hard fella he grinned and bore it. Not how I would've coped at all.

I got stung by a Waikato Wasp in the eye when I was a kid, and it is an experience I definitely do not want to repeat! About a month later, I got stung on the cheek on the other side of my face by a honey bee!!

I'd be cautious about taking Anti-histimine tablets while driving or riding as they can cause drowsiness. When I got stung on the tummy last week, I took 1 tablet and it totally wiped me out for the rest of the day! Mind you, it says to also avoid alcohol and I had a glass of wine, so that may have something to do with it! LOL But it did bring to my attention never to drive or ride after taking even just one tablet... Carry some of that Stingose or Anthisan Cream.

Biggles2000
8th April 2008, 20:05
I got stung by a Waikato Wasp in the eye when I was a kid, and it is an experience I definitely do not want to repeat! About a month later, I got stung on the cheek on the other side of my face by a honey bee!!

I'd be cautious about taking Anti-histimine tablets while driving or riding as they can cause drowsiness. When I got stung on the tummy last week, I took 1 tablet and it totally wiped me out for the rest of the day! Mind you, it says to also avoid alcohol and I had a glass of wine, so that may have something to do with it! LOL But it did bring to my attention never to drive or ride after taking even just one tablet... Carry some of that Stingose or Anthisan Cream.

If you are alergic to bee stings drowsiness is the least of your worries.

Nade
10th April 2008, 14:56
my partner got stung just below her left eye. No problem...she's not allergic.
the next day she had to come home from work cos it has swollen up and her eye was closing over. the next day we went to motueka and she ended up at the emergency dr with an eye completely closed over and on steriods to combat the swelling. Both of us were quite worried but it turns out that as the skin/ flesh is so thin on the face the stings can cause quite a large amount of swelling......the standard joke was she shouldn't have talked back....lol

fireball
10th April 2008, 15:12
is that a no to the bonjella and a yes to the jar of honey??

the honey is for the lesbians isnt it?