Bee hives in an Abbotsford, British Columbia apiary.
I was photographing a scene with farmland and Mount Baker the other day in Abbotsford, BC. This was to be my first stop of many on the way through Mission, the Harrison area and Agassiz. Some horses came over to the fence to say hello, but wandered off after they realized I didn’t have any treats or anything for them. With the horses came the flies, which was annoying. I made this photograph of the bee hives in the field (probably 60 feet away from me) soon after. I made 3 exposures. The first two were like this, and the third is very blurry. As I was making the 3rd exposure a bee flew partly up my nose (I thought it was a fly). After a failed “one nostril push” maneuver to get it out I grabbed it with my fingers. The result of this was a bee stinger lodged in that space between my upper lip and my recently invaded nostril.
I had not been stung by a bee since I was a kid, and it is still the unpleasant experience that I recall. It felt a bit like I’d been hit in the teeth with something. I quickly got in my car (I’d been standing next to it) and looked in the rear view mirror. Sure enough, there was a bee stinger in my face. I tried to flick it out with a fingernail but it stayed put. I then remembered reading that you can get them out with a credit card or something flat like that. If you grab a stinger with your fingers, the round part above the surface will act a bit like a turkey baster – and you’ll inject all the venom into the wound. I wished to avoid this, and a quick flick with a credit card got the stinger out of my face. All in all it was probably only in there for 10-15 seconds. Not having had a sting for 25+ years, I wasn’t sure how my body was going to react. Things like this can swell quit a bit, so I cut my trip short (after only about 25 minutes) to go home and endure whatever messy aftermath was to befall me rather than it playing out in public. I didn’t want a golf ball sized swelling on my face when I was trying to photograph either. So I grabbed the freezer pack from my cooler, stuck it on my face, and drove home. As it turned out I only had some minor swelling and it all settled down after about 30 minutes (the ice probably helped). I went out again to shoot a local park after dinner. I guess it was a relatively good outcome that the worst of this was that I had to postpone my trip one day. I’m also glad that I managed to complete shooting Mount Baker and the farmland successfully so I won’t have to return to that spot!
For more photographs of bees and other critters take a look at my Animals and Wildlife Gallery.
I’m still glad you’re ok so I can laugh at this story. ๐
Technically you could still laugh even if I wasn’t okay. ๐
I could, but I would feel bad about it.
That does not sound pleasant. I had a bee fly and hit my sunglasses head on. I wondered what it would have been like if I didn’t have the sunglasses on. I guess I know now.
Bees aren’t too aggressive though. I’ve had them land on me before, walk along my arm etc. One flying into your face wouldn’t be much of an issue unless you grabbed it or it got stuck up a nostril or something. ๐
Yikes – I guess it is better than getting stung INSIDE your nose. I believe that would be quite a difficult maneuver with a credit card!
First I’d have to find the stinger then figure out how to get it out of there. I am relatively glad it stung were it did!