Most of them die off - especially the 'solitary' species.. I've already seen a number of dead and dying bees and wasps this year. They will have mated, and produced eggs which will lie dormant over the winter, to develop once the warm weather returns. The wasps that live in colonies usually 'ride out' the winter in nests either underground, or in disused buildings.
The wax starts to get hard and cold
it starts to get coldthunder and lightning
You get "goose bumps" and your hair starts to grow if you have shaved legs :)
Wasps typically start to come out of hibernation in the spring when the temperature starts to warm up. This can vary depending on the region and species of wasp. Most common wasps become active in late spring or early summer.
it gets coldit gets cold
Young queen wasps search for a sheltered place in which to hibernate during autumn (fall). All other wasps will die when the cold weather comes.
the gas starts to bubble up (boil) and when you put cold gases in it it startes to cool down the gas starts to bubble up (boil) and when you put cold gases in it it startes to cool down
Young queen wasps will hibernate through their first winter to start new colonies in the spring, all other wasps die when the cold weather comes.
The intense cold and lack of food would make it impossible for a wasp to live at the North Pole, which is a gigantic floating ice floe. Wasps become torpid in a cold British winter, never mind at the arctic.
You get stung...
Wasps do not hibernate in the earth of house plants. While some species of wasps may overwinter in crevices or sheltered locations, they do not typically seek out the soil of house plants for hibernation.
It starts cold