Author Topic: Beekeeper death in Utah  (Read 10625 times)

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Offline tbonekel

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Re: Beekeeper death in Utah
« Reply #20 on: May 22, 2014, 06:30:38 am »
Riv, with what you have been through, you can go off the deep end any time you want.

Offline Intheswamp

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Re: Beekeeper death in Utah
« Reply #21 on: May 22, 2014, 11:04:07 am »
not going to apologize for what i said here. my opinion,  how insensitive and flys in the face of anyone truly allergic to stinging insects, and lives to tell about it.  no fluff here. 

hope i didn't kill this thread, just being honest.  this story and loss of life serves as a reminder to all of as to what can happen. 

aw riverbee went off the deep end.......dang right i did.....hope someone carries an epi pen or two cuz of my going off the deep end.  ;D
I'm not sure exactly what tbonekel is referring to regarding what you went through (I know you went through sting therapy), and I'm a little "slow", but for the life of me I can't see anything in your post to apologize about...just facts and experiences being shared. 

I've got two granddaughters 3 and 7 years old who come to the house fairly often.  The 7 year old had asthma when she was younger and her mother still keeps an inhaler around "in case".  I had an adult epi-pen when I first started with bees...more for someone else than myself.  Getting comfortable and complacent with the bees I let the pen expire and the prescription. 

This tragedy and reinforcing statements from folks like yourself are prompting me to get a prescription for another pen, but I have a question.  Would I be better off to get a child pen or an adult pen.  Or two child's pens???  I'm concerned about the grandkids, especially with the knowledge of the previous(?) issue the 7yo had with asthma.  I also realize that if an allergic adult gets stung they can quickly be in a serious situation, too.  riverbee, since you're apparently knowledgeable about allergies and epi-pens do you think I could cover adults and children by having two child's pens?  Using a single pen on a child wild doubling up on an adult?  Hypothetically, of course.  Thankfully, the only person to get stung around here since I got my first little nuc of bees in the winter of 2011 has been me.  Thanks for the epi-pen encouragement, riverbee.

Ed

Offline riverbee

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Re: Beekeeper death in Utah
« Reply #22 on: May 22, 2014, 12:46:49 pm »
"Riv, with what you have been through, you can go off the deep end any time you want."

thanks tbone, guess i am a little sensitive to this issue, i think it's called fear, my own.

ed, thanks.  i suffered anaphylactic and systemic reactions, so turns out i am allergic to all stinging insects.  i am doing the injection therapy, probably will for life, and receive 3 injections each visit, now every 6 weeks.  i am on a maintenance dose. i have a thread here on it, so that's what tbone was referring to.  it's been a long haul.

having said that, i am an advocate and pester everyone to carry an epi-pen.  if you have grandchildren, by all means get them an eppy.  some folks with severe asthma also carry them.  i am not a doctor ed, so as far as a child's pen vs an adult pen, these are different doses, so i would get the appropriate prescription as prescribed by your physician.  you can get them for free right now for the entire year of 2014, the thread is here:

EPI PEN Zero Dollar Co-Pay Offer

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Gypsi

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Re: Beekeeper death in Utah
« Reply #23 on: May 31, 2014, 02:10:06 am »
I need to fill the epi prescription I got for my helper when I took him to the clinic. He is not allergic, but no telling if anyone else is.

And part of why I want to go down to 2 hives is a family with young children that have moved in about half a block away. I also did a split to avoid a swarm in one hive, and didn't feed the hot hive to discourage excess population and swarming til I could get it requeened.

As I told my friend in Pantego this past week, basically, everything I do is somewhat dangerous. You go in the house now.