The best thing to use is vinegar. The chemicals in it react with the sting. Wet sand also works.
jellyfish have tentacles hanging down and streaming behind them in the ocean that have poisonous stingers on them, and other tentacles that grasp prey that has been stung and pulls it up into itself.
You can use Acetaminophen for your Bee sting.
I was walking in the forset and got stung by a stinging nettle.
pour water (fresh not salt) and wash it. makesure the person is breathing.
First, do not touch the jelly that is on the person. Second, try to wash off the jelly with something. Pull out any spines that you can find with your fingernails. If you have a base like dilute liquid ammonia or baking soda, apply it so that it can neutralize the acid in the jelly. Watch for shock, and if the stung area is more than several square inches, transport the victim to a hospital for treatment of the stung areas. Oddly, the creature that is most harmful is the Man o' War "jelly fish", which is not even a jellyfish!
Well my mom told me when she was little she would use soap so she wouldn't get stung
It would serve someone right if they were stung when disturbing the bees.
Jellyfish defend themselves using nematocysts in their tentacles. Nematocysts are roughly the equivalent of having many tiny spears on the end of many tightly wound springs. Once something touches the jellyfish's tentacles, the nematocysts are launched. If you are stung, they are very painful and depending on the species of jellyfish, they can be very dangerous or even life-threatening. Jellyfish also use this same technique to catch prey.
No, it looks like you did not use the correct verb. You probably meant to say that a bee stung you yesterday, and that (A bee stung me yesterday) would be correct. Although there is a slang usage for "skunk" as a verb, the past tense is "skunked". Also, since "to skunk" means "to defeat thoroughly", it would not make sense for a bee to skunk you.
It is difficult to give a categorical answer to this. With certain food allergies, such as egg, there are recorded cases of responses improving with age, but this is not universal. I can find no direct information with respect to hypersensitivity to bee venom so I would suggest you err on the side of safety. If you are in a situation where you could be stung by bees, I suggest if you have not got one already, see your medical practitioner and ask for an epipen for use if you are stung. Use of this at the onset of symptoms would alleviate the worst effects.
IF something happens to the bee and it doesn't use its stinger and it dies, it still has its stinger. The stinger is still able to be used even after death. So if you step on a dead bee it can still sting you.
You should use meat tenderizer for a jellyfish sting.