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NJCher

(37,743 posts)
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 03:58 PM Jun 2021

I picked up a wasp with my fingers and

didn't mean to. Didn't even know that's what I was picking up.

I was gardening and felt something on my neck. I reached to the back of my neck and picked off whatever. I was very preoccupied and not really thinking about it.

When I put the "whatever" down and saw it was a black wasp and he walked off without stinging me, I was shocked!

Never heard of such a thing. I thought stinging for wasps was instinctive.

19 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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I picked up a wasp with my fingers and (Original Post) NJCher Jun 2021 OP
I think they try to keep their stinger if possible. Cracklin Charlie Jun 2021 #1
Wasps don't lose their stinger when they sting. It's smooth, not Arkansas Granny Jun 2021 #10
Fascinating. PoindexterOglethorpe Jun 2021 #2
I guess that's worse than what I took off myself today. Croney Jun 2021 #3
I pulled a tick off the back of my neck today Freddie Jun 2021 #8
Waspy knew leftieNanner Jun 2021 #4
You did much better than me when I was a kid woodsprite Jun 2021 #5
-- NJCher Jun 2021 #6
I'm 67 years old Mr.Bill Jun 2021 #7
They're all out there bucolic_frolic Jun 2021 #9
wasps may or may not sting Kali Jun 2021 #11
Wasps are beneficial, they are pollinators, they control garden "pests," they almost never... Botany Jun 2021 #12
Some kind of wasps are pollinating my pepper plants right now. Mariana Jun 2021 #14
wasp color NJCher Jul 2021 #16
I plant native plants and it is amazing how close you can Botany Jul 2021 #17
with you 100% on that NJCher Jul 2021 #18
Any questions let me know Botany Jul 2021 #19
Some species are more eager to sting than others. Mariana Jun 2021 #13
Only females sting iirc Lars39 Jul 2021 #15

Cracklin Charlie

(12,904 posts)
1. I think they try to keep their stinger if possible.
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 04:00 PM
Jun 2021

Lucky you. I got stung last year on the forearm last year right outside the front door.

Those things hurt.

Arkansas Granny

(31,810 posts)
10. Wasps don't lose their stinger when they sting. It's smooth, not
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 04:45 PM
Jun 2021

barbed like a bee. They can sting repeatedly.

PoindexterOglethorpe

(26,639 posts)
2. Fascinating.
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 04:01 PM
Jun 2021

I know nothing about wasps, but your story makes me think stinging isn't that instinctive.

Thank you for posting.

Croney

(4,918 posts)
3. I guess that's worse than what I took off myself today.
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 04:04 PM
Jun 2021

A tick, trying to embed on my lower abdomen. Dog must have brought it in. You must have grabbed the wasp just right!

Freddie

(9,686 posts)
8. I pulled a tick off the back of my neck today
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 04:16 PM
Jun 2021

Still grossed out. Probably came from my grandcat who was on my lap. I wish they wouldn’t let her out but once they get a taste of the outdoors they like it too much.

leftieNanner

(15,674 posts)
4. Waspy knew
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 04:09 PM
Jun 2021

That you had to cook those delicious Italian sausages for dinner tonight and didn't want to injure your chef's fingers!

(I read your What's for Dinner post.)

woodsprite

(12,182 posts)
5. You did much better than me when I was a kid
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 04:11 PM
Jun 2021

I would catch honeybees when they landed on clover because I thought they looked fuzzy and cute. Apparently I tried to kiss one after my mom told me to leave them alone.

bucolic_frolic

(46,816 posts)
9. They're all out there
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 04:28 PM
Jun 2021

Big orange bees, giant European hornets, black hornets, some kind of black shiny hornet bees with white diamonds on their backs, super giant hornet moth (which is harmless but will scare the bee-Jesus out of you). And I get snakes but that's subject for another thread.

Kali

(55,711 posts)
11. wasps may or may not sting
Thu Jun 17, 2021, 07:26 PM
Jun 2021

I have grabbed them accidentally many times sometimes they sting sometimes not, I have even purposely let them rescue themselves from the pool by crawling on my hand. would never do that with a bee. bees are stupid and ungrateful.

Botany

(72,385 posts)
12. Wasps are beneficial, they are pollinators, they control garden "pests," they almost never...
Sun Jun 20, 2021, 10:39 AM
Jun 2021

... sting humans because the wasps like the one you touched is most likely a female and the important
use in "the wasp world" of its stinger is not to sting other critters (except if you were squeezing it in your
hands or were trying to eat a live one and then they would sting you) but to paralyze other bugs, caterpillars,
and or spiders at which they deposit the paralyzed critter into its nest which already has a fertilized egg
in it as a food source for its next generation. Using up its stinger on you to that wasp would be a waste.




Is this the vespid in question?


Mariana

(15,022 posts)
14. Some kind of wasps are pollinating my pepper plants right now.
Sat Jun 26, 2021, 02:51 PM
Jun 2021

They're doing a great job, too - lots of baby peppers on the plants. No idea what species, but these wasps are pretty small.

NJCher

(37,743 posts)
16. wasp color
Tue Jul 6, 2021, 03:26 PM
Jul 2021

Hey, Botany, thanks for the response. I just saw this when I saw new posts on this thread.

It appears we have many circumstances when wasps don't sting, unbeknownst to me. Thanks to all the posters who responded with information.

It has been so long now that I can't recall if it was pure black or had some black and white to it. I think the latter, but wouldn't swear to it.

Botany

(72,385 posts)
17. I plant native plants and it is amazing how close you can
Tue Jul 6, 2021, 03:45 PM
Jul 2021

get to bees and wasps and how little they want to sting you.

Doug Tallamy's Bringing Nature Home & Nature's Best Hope are very good books and the Xercis Society is good too. We need all them little crtters.

NJCher

(37,743 posts)
18. with you 100% on that
Wed Jul 7, 2021, 11:40 AM
Jul 2021

I just finished Deer Resistant Plants of the Northeast (Clauson) which tells of plants that you put in your front yard and that deer don't want to eat.

I'm getting native plants into the school gardens I manage, too. I love seeing the place full of bees and butterflies--and wasps, too.

Thanks for those suggestions: I am going to check to see if they're available at my public library.

Botany

(72,385 posts)
19. Any questions let me know
Wed Jul 7, 2021, 12:05 PM
Jul 2021

You might want to see if you can make the school gardens into Doug Tallamy's backyard national
park project.

Mariana

(15,022 posts)
13. Some species are more eager to sting than others.
Sat Jun 26, 2021, 02:41 PM
Jun 2021

Seems like the most aggressive ones have the most painful stings.

Lars39

(26,225 posts)
15. Only females sting iirc
Tue Jul 6, 2021, 02:51 PM
Jul 2021

My grandpa used to freak my grandma out by mashing them by hand. He could tell the difference.

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