Because you're sick.
There is nothing necessarily in the watermelon that would make someone break out in hives. They might be allergic to watermelon and this would be why they broke out in hives.
Yes they can. I break out in hives if I smoke a menthol cigarette and the funny thing is is that I smoked a year until I broke out into hives and that was the reason.
Bee hives do not freeze in the winter. Bees slow down and cluster to regulate temperatures inside the hive and survive.
What is worse than a bee with a cold? A bee covered in hives.
yes,you should be because you are stuiped
hives
allergic reaction
Skin
As a rule, cold sores are not a rash, but a blister! A rash sounds like,"Hives".
In their hives because it's cold and dark outside.
In addition, hives may also result from the body's response to certain physical conditions, such as emotional stress , rubbing, cold wind,
The rashes that looks like ant bite are hives.Hives occur when the body releases a chemical called histamine. There are so many possible reasons for hives that you may have trouble identifying the culprit. Here are the most likely ones:Insect bites and stings. If your child is allergic to bees or fire ants, for example, he could develop hives in reaction to being stung or bitten.Food. Your child might get hives in reaction to something he eats. The most likely foods to offend are milk, eggs, peanuts, tree nuts (e.g., almonds, walnuts, pecans), soybeans, wheat, fish, and shellfish. Certain food additives and preservatives can also trigger hives. Your child may break out in hives because he's allergic to the protein in the food, or simply because his body reacts to a chemical in the food by releasing histamine. Some children even develop hives simply from coming into contact with certain foods - for example, when the juice from a strawberry gets on their skin.Allergens: Children who have developed an allergy to cats may break out in hives when they touch a cat. Your child may even react with hives to an allergen in the air, like pollen.Illness. Your child might get hives when he has a cold or other viral infection. Less commonly, he may get hives when he has a bacterial infection.Temperature. Sometimes cold temperatures cause hives. The same goes for a sudden change in temperature - such as when your child's skin warms up after being cold.Drugs. Antibiotics and some other medications might cause your child to break out in hives.GOOD LUCK