Welcome guest, is this your first visit? Click the "Create Account" button now to join.

To disable ads, please log-in.

Shop at TeamEstrogen.com for women's cycling apparel.

Results 1 to 10 of 10

Hybrid View

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Asheville, NC
    Posts
    680

    hehe...I am allergic!

    OK...so I won't know exactly how serious it is but I am a suffering optimist and have a hard time seeing any real issues with this yet! I know there could be far worse things so I will just learn to deal!

    OH...what? you say? BEES! I was stung the other day resulting in a Popeye arm and a turtle lip (which occured later the next day...very odd) soooo, I call the allergy clinic make an appointment 3 weeks out (have to wait till the current venom has cleared my body) After extensive research my hubby found out that as you get older stinging critter allergies can get worse!!! I have NEVER, ever been stung before until the last few weeks I have had 4 yellow jacket encounters and 1 bee sting. The yellow jackets only resulted in mild swelling 4-5 inches around contact point but the bee sting seemed to bee (hehe) much worse!
    (I have to mention....after hubby learned this info he set the alarm for various times throught the night to wake up and check on me... )

    The allergist said over the phone the next bee encounter could result in a more severe reaction (respitory issues) and suggested getting a perscription from my family doc for an epi-pen until they can administer proper testing....merely because I stated I refuse to stop riding and it is critter season here (I ride in the woods...sometimes deep woods so help is not always close)

    I am not really trying to make lite of the situation but I did want to share the info about getting older and reactions getting worse:

    Even if you have been stung at a younger age you could react bad later in life...40 seemed to be the magic age. I ALWAYS carry Benedryl, but for some reason did not take it the day of the bee sting which I should have! It did not swell up till later...and I have to admit I was a little nervous when the lip started blowing up! it was late in the evening...an ER visit was almost gonna happen!

    Now for the REAL lite of the whole situation: most of my riding jerseys are bright and colorful...and as we all know that is a magnet for stinging critters...so what is NOW on my agenda????

    YEP!!!! SHOPPING!!!!!! hehe...I MUST invest in drab summer gear now! even socks but my bra is hidden

    Ride safe out there ya'll...and don't forget your safety gear! including meds!


    ***Please do not get upset that I am making lite of an allergy! I do understand the seriousness of a fatal allergy to stings...I ride with a gal who is deathly allergic! She just takes precautions and carries her pen everywhere!!! she is also one reason I carry Benedryl! thanks
    Last edited by bouncybouncy; 08-16-2007 at 11:28 AM.
    I am a nobody; nobody is perfect, and therefore I am perfect.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    8,548
    sorry to hear about your intensified allergy. but are you serious about the clothing? If you're getting stung on bike rides, it's probably because you rode into the bee's way? and what you're wearing wouldn't matter, would it?
    a mad bee's just plain mad, whether you're wearing grey or red ?
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2005
    Location
    Asheville, NC
    Posts
    680
    Well actually, every article I read said that about the clothing...but remember I am a mtbiker so I am riding off-road in the woods.

    The first yellow-jacket encounter was on a bridge over a stream with at least 10 other people around...but I had bright pink socks with various bright colored flowers. I was the only one stung.

    Second encounter I was 3rd in a line of riders about 100-200 feet apart...there was a dog with us that could have pissed off a nest with his curious nose...and I rode right through the swarm!!! Luckily it was on a downhill and I was able to loose them! (the guy behind me got stung too)

    Third, the bee encounter, we voluntarily dismounted to walk to a waterfall. 3 of us in very close proximity, 2 had muted colored outfits, me in my bright pink, purple & white swirly jersey....WHAM!!!!

    I have always been attracted to (what my father calls) baby-$#!T colors and is what I usually wear...but when I am on the road I want to be seen so I have been collecting bright jerseys for when I am sharing space with cars...apparently I need to have a wardrobe for off-road and a wardrobe for on-road!!! man my closets gonna get full
    I am a nobody; nobody is perfect, and therefore I am perfect.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2004
    Posts
    2,609
    I'm sitting here trying not to scratch my most recent bee-sting. Like you, I don't recall ever having a reaction, but two days ago on a steep descent, I ran right into one, right on my breastbone, and it stung me three times before I swatted it away. I was afraid it went down my sports bra! Luckily, it didn't, considering the story below. The area it stung is all red and swollen, and itchy in a 5-inch circle around it.

    You'll love this story about the last time I was stung (and before that, don't think I was stung since I was a little kid.) I had finished a ride up in the mountains and stopped at a small-town Walmart on the way home. I was wearing some loose floppy jogging pants that I put on after rides, with nothing underneath. I step out of my car and feel a huge sting on my hip bone. I grab at it, and feel a big bug in there! I try to get it out, but I can't get it out without flashing the entire parking lot. It gets loose, stings me once more on my hip. I'm dancing around like crazy - a carload of people are getting out, looking at me like Im insane, I scream that there's a bug in my pants! This huge, burly man starts easing his way over, just as the hornet bites me one more time, this time a little lower than my hip, just west of my thigh, if y'all know what I mean I grab my crotch with all my might and squeeze. I let go, and out of the bottom of my pants falls a HUGE yellow hornet - about two inches long. The guy walks up, looks at it, lets out a slow whistle, and then promptly smashes it. His wife offers me a cigarette and tells me that I need to put some wet tobacco on the stings.

    That's my bug story. Back to your regularly scheduled forum.
    For 3 days, I get to part of a thousand other journeys.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Colorado
    Posts
    425
    What is it with the frickin bees/wasps/hornets this year? In my whole life I'd been stung twice. Now this year I've been stung twice within 6 weeks. I'm pg, so I didn't want to take any benadryl, and can't take ibuprofen. The first was on my arm, the stinger was still attached with venom sac. (This was just playing with my dogs in my yard). In 3 days my arm had swollen from 2" above my elbow to my wrist. Finally went to the doc, he said to just take the benadryl and gave me a topical cream that didn't seem to do much. He said to stop icing it (the only thing that relieved the unbelievable heat and itching). Next was about 2 weeks ago, I was riding, this thing flew into my right leg, bounced off it, then grazed my left inner thigh. I stopped immediately, and while there was no stinger, there was a tiny hole in my shorts where it'd gone through. In 2 days my leg was swollen from about 2" below the bikini line to about 3" above my knee. Luckily this one didn't get as hot and itchy, but still hurt.

    So what do I say when people ask if I'm allergic? Well, yes, I'm obviously allergic. I don't have systemic reactions (breathing, hives, etc.) but severe local reactions. I wish there was something more that could be done other than taking benadryl. Grrr.
    The best part about going up hills is riding back down!

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
    Location
    around Seattle, WA
    Posts
    3,238
    Somehow, I've never been stung while riding my bike (road). But I worry when we're riding the levee path while the maintenance crew is cutting the grass - cause that makes the bees mad.

    I think it isn't the clothes that attract the bees as the sweeter smelling stuff we tend to wash in. The perfumes in soaps and shampoo, made for women, tend to attract bugs.

    Of course, nothing really stops a mad wasp. Couple of years ago while at my Aunt's house in northern Louisiana (evacuating from a hurricane....) a red wasp flew straight at me and stung me. Confirmed that, yes, I'm still very allergic to bees and wasps (Hymanoptera .. i think that's spelled right). In fact it came close to killing me. Run from a hurricane and get done in by a bug. There is not justice in the world.

    Not that I'm stopping you, HappyAnika, from shopping, but maybe you should consider the soaps you use to wash yourself and your clothes in. Most women do like to stink pretty as my grandfather used to say.
    Beth

 

 

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •