ellebee said:
The big ones with the orange stripes? Those are harmless. We used to play with those.
https://hubpages.com/education/black-fuzzy-caterpillar
No, these are all black
ellebee said:
The big ones with the orange stripes? Those are harmless. We used to play with those.
https://hubpages.com/education/black-fuzzy-caterpillar
cclearman said:
I touched an asp last year, just to see how bad it was. Pretty painful and lasted longer than I thought.
Alte Schule said:
Found about a dozen more crawling out of a bush on the side of the house. Saw some type of big web in the middle of the bush so I'm guessing that's where they came from. Sprayed it down real good and got the stragglers. Or so I thought.
Brother in law was under my grandsons Explorer replacing a water pump and one nailed him on the side of his head. He wasn't a happy person. Wife was wearing flips and brushed against a dead one. Even dead their dangerous. Diluted bleach does work.
Probably average about three inches. The pale colored ones seemed a little smaller.dr_boogs said:
The Op's photo makes it look like the thing is the size of a mouse or rat. How big are these things? We have all sorts of caterpillars at our place but I've nevet seen these. Spreadsheet titled "avoid at all costs" had been updated. Thanks fellas.
Apache said:Answered by own question... Schmidt hasn't done a study on them.Quote:
The go-to person for entomological pain is Dr. Justin Schmidt, best known as the author of the Schmidt Pain Index; a ranking system calculated from the agony caused by a wide variety of wasps and bees stinging him during his research. While Schmidt hasn't systematically studied caterpillars, he did say the pain of a caterpillar sting lasted longer than the pain of most wasp or bee stings.
Wired article on stinging caterpillars
I am now irritated that the asp isn't ranked. It has to be up there with the Bullet Ant and Tarantula Hawk as a 4 on the pain scale.
Per Wikipedia, Pain level 3:I've been hit by red wasps & while painful, they don't sound near as bad as an asp. I'm sure some of y'all have been hit by a velvet ant (cow killer) and an asp. How did they compare? I may make it my personal mission to get the asp measured by the doctor so the little b*&tard can get the bad recognition it deserves.Quote:
Most insects that are characterized as having a pain level of 3 are wasps, including the red paper wasp, the metricus paper wasp, and the velvet ant (which is actually a wasp, not an ant).
So I have been bit/stung byAggie Infantry said:
Quote:
Schmidt is rather colorful and thorough in his sting descriptions, too. He described the 1-point pain of the mud dauber as "sharp with a flare of heat; jalapeno cheese when you were expecting Havarti." The Matabele ant has a sting at the 1.5-point level, comparable to a "child's arrow [that] misses its target and finds its home in your calf." [Image Gallery: Ants of the World]
A type of wasp called a velvet ant or cow killer produces pain that is at the 3-point level, "explosive and long lasting, [in which] you sound insane as you scream." And should you encounter the sting of the warrior wasp, at the 4-point level, that's simply "torture; you are chained in the flow of an active volcano [asking] why did I start this list?"
I dont get why red wasp at 5-10 is in red but yellow jacket at 10 is in orangeLoudestWHOOP! said:
Insect pain index articleQuote:
Schmidt is rather colorful and thorough in his sting descriptions, too. He described the 1-point pain of the mud dauber as "sharp with a flare of heat; jalapeno cheese when you were expecting Havarti." The Matabele ant has a sting at the 1.5-point level, comparable to a "child's arrow [that] misses its target and finds its home in your calf." [Image Gallery: Ants of the World]
A type of wasp called a velvet ant or cow killer produces pain that is at the 3-point level, "explosive and long lasting, [in which] you sound insane as you scream." And should you encounter the sting of the warrior wasp, at the 4-point level, that's simply "torture; you are chained in the flow of an active volcano [asking] why did I start this list?"
Makes sense.... hadn't seen that anywhereQuote:
The asp isn't ranked by Schmidt because he was specifically ranking hymenopterans (ants/wasps/bees).
GE said:
I got hit by an asp last year. Fell onto my back out of a live oak and stung me through a dry fit shirt. Hurt like hell. Carried a scar for years from a pretty hard full-body asp sting to the inside of my arm at the elbow crease as a child. Worst pain I had been in to that point as far as I can remember.