BY TOM LAVIS
TLAVIS@TRIBDEM.COM
Crutch Crupnik came over to my house during the long Labor Day weekend to ask for help.
I reached out to shake his hand and he cringed as if Ted Kennedy had stepped on his foot.
“I can’t move my arm,” he said.
He slowly raised his right arm and I could see a puffed-up area between his forearm and shoulder.
“I got stung by a bee this morning when I tried to get a Frisbee down from the tree,” Crutch said.
I immediately asked the obvious question: “Do people still play Frisbee?”
“I came here for help, not sarcasm,” he said.
“What is that hanging from your elbow?” I asked.
A large pocket of skin had been stretched to its breaking point as a big water pocket dangled from his arm. It resembled a water balloon hanging on a tree limb.
“I was going to stick a needle in it, but
didn’t want to get water on the kitchen floor,” he said.
He was told that placing an aspirin on the sting would reduce the swelling.
“It might have worked, but it kept falling off my elbow,” Crutch said.
He found out later that he should have crushed the aspirin and made a paste.
I suggested to Crutch that we should call my buddy, Buzz Yobo, who is a stinger control technician at Super Bee Pest Control, to rid the bees from his tree.
“Buzz was once stung by 200 Africanized killer bees and lived to tell about it,” I said. “I hope you can understand sign language, because it will be at least six months before Buzz actually will be able to speak again.”
Instead of bothering Buzz, we decided to come up with our own plan.
Crutch was watching the Implausible Channel a while back when he saw an episode of “The World’s Dumbest Jobs and Why Are You Watching?”
“The guys fighting killer bees wore heavy canvas coveralls and used a thick, mesh face net over their head,” Crutch said.
We were going to face the enemy head on and decided to make our own bee-proof suits, similar to those Crutch saw on television.
We went down to House Heaven home improvement center and went to the paint department to buy some coveralls.
All they had were the paper kind that are good for a single use.
While we were there, we also bought work gloves, goggles, tall garbage bags to protect our heads and duct tape to seal any opening where a bee might try to enter.
But the key to this operation was Crutch’s workshop vacuum.
“The guy on the show used a vacuum to suck the bees from their hive,” he said.
We got dressed and went to locate the hive.
Picture Marty McFly’s radiation suit from “Back to the Future” and you have some idea what we looked like. Only we resembled Jackie Gleason and John Candy stuffed like sausage into these suits.
We started sucking the swarm off the limb and into the 16-gallon container.
Let’s just say the bees grew agitated. Apparently they have an aversion to loud machines and two idiots disturbing their nest.
I soon discovered that there is no such thing as a homemade bee-proof suit.
We also learned that an airtight seal is required when sucking bees into a vacuum.
Apparently we did not have the right equipment. Later, I told Crutch the crevice tool would have been better than the upholstery brush.
Crushed aspirin, anyone?
Features
Sucking up a swarm of trouble | Tom Lavis
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Events | Arts fitness
“Music and Art for Heart and Soul” will be held from 6 to 10 tonight at Art Works in Johnstown! 413 Third Ave. in the Cambria City section of Johnstown.
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'New York City Subway Idol' | Soul, rhythm and blues singer in concert Feb. 18 at Pasquerilla Performing Arts Center
Alice Tan Ridley is just as popular above ground as below it. The singer, known as “The New York City Subway Idol,” will perform at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 18 at Pasquerilla Performing Arts Center on the Pitt-Johnstown campus in Richland Township.
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All things afield at annual sportsmen's show
Folks who crave the great outdoors will have the chance to get a jump on their adventures by attending the 27th annual Allegheny Sport, Travel and Outdoor Show at the Monroeville Convention Center. The show, which runs from Feb. 15-19, is the only western Pennsylvania show dedicated to hunting, fishing and camping. It offers hundreds of exhibitors, dozens of live demonstrations and many seminars presented by experts in their fields of interest.
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Venue of Merging Arts to host Slovak Mardi Gras
Slovak heritage will be the center of attention at an upcoming party. A Slovak Mardi Gras, or Fasiangy, will be held from 2 to 5 p.m. Feb. 19 at Venue of Merging Arts, 305 Chestnut St. in the Cambria City section of Johnstown.
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Go jump in a lake | Laurel Highlands Polar Plunge at Que to raise funds for Special Olympics
It takes a hearty soul to jump into a freezing Pennsylvania lake in February and pay money to do it. But that’s what organizers of the first official Laurel Highlands Polar Plunge are counting on. On Saturday, if people donate to Special Olympics of Pennsylvania, they can go jump in a lake.
- Area high schools have scheduled spring shows
- Tom Lavis | Coming unglued when trying to peel wallpaper
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Westmont Hilltop High School has reached theatrical milestone
“The Pirates of Penzance” will mark Westmont Hilltop High School’s 50th year of presenting musical theater.
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Curtains rising | Students acting out roles in spring productions
A variety of performances that promise to be entertaining are scheduled for area high school stages.
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Tribute band to play best of Pink Floyd at War Memorial
This arena show will bring the lights and sounds of Pink Floyd. Brit Floyd, billed as the world’s greatest Pink Floyd show, will perform at 8 p.m. Feb. 25 at the Cambria County War Memorial Arena, 326 Napoleon St., Johnstown.
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