@@bobdole7451 some aliens that live 1000 years probably saying they are glad they aren't humans that managed to get to 60 So that's same for bugs that short life will feel like ages to them
I have found over--wintering ladybugs twice in my life. Once in a friend`s cold front hall, and once under an outdoor porch mat, under the snow and ice. They appeared to be either sound asleep or dead both times. How ever if you place one in the palm of your warm hand, if it is alive still, it will begin to show signs of life after a few minutes. They do not all survive over-wintering. It was fascinating. I felt that it was my lucky day both times.
Found 1 bunch ladybugs resting in a jacket pocket of a scare crow, thought it was a food collection of a mouse weirded me out a bit to understand it afterwards after telling biology teacher
@@MrPartyplopper interesting! The Inuit used to keep an eye out for mouse food. Those would be caches of seeds a mouse had stored for winter. They’d enjoy it like trail mix. Warning to anyone in this exchange- Never put a ladybug in your mouth. This happened when I was picking raspberries. Your body will spit it out. You don’t even need to think about it. If a ladybug larvae drops on your skin from a tree, you will know it immediately. They start chewing. Ladybug, ladybug Fly away home. Your house is on fire, Your children may burn.
I have been feeding 50 female honey bees who are staying somewhere in my ceiling. Each day I prepare fresh nectar, puréed apple and lemon or orange juice with very finely chopped rind. They like organic coconut oil and anything I eat. I purée chicken and arugula with apples and red onion if I have that as a meal. Here’s why I’m here: baby spiders end up in the very tiny upside down espresso cups filled with nectar and it’s getting overwhelming. I can’t seem to find extra tiny glass containers for them to hibernate in the bees’ leftover nectar for the winter. I would ideally need a glass or China ice cube tray times 20 or so til spring. Oyyy.
@@zwekkerboy716 thank you, for some reason I only see two comments. Since I posted that, I’ve found small affordable containers so all is well. My problem then became tiny sized beautiful loving spiders were in the nectar at end of day. I tried the scoop method but I found it too risky that I may injure them who I’ve learned like to hibernate in nectar for the winter months. The great part is they’re all light bodies so they can be watching movies and coming along in the car if they so choose. Happy new year and thanks again for your thoughtfulness. Blessings.
@@B3ASTM0DE92 They feed the larva the bugs they catch and grind up in their mouths, and the larva basically spit out a sugary substance that the adults eat. The queen lays eggs that turn into larvae pretty much all year, so towards the end of the year, when they aren’t needed anymore, the workers throw those extras out. I don’t think they do a good job of describing how the rest of winter goes for any of these species tho lol. Like for the honeybees, they could’ve mentioned that they move around the hive in a ball between several frames, and that ball moves around the hive as they eat the honey in the cells of each frame. I don’t understand what happens to the European hornets, yellowjackets, and other wasps that don’t store food.
Had one that kept me from connecting my garden hose in the back of my house all summer (asshole hornet 😆). Huge ass, mega hornet!! Obviously nested in the ground cause it was chasing everything off. My grandmother had yellow jackets hornets built a nest under her front porch. Those weren’t too bad other than changing different doors during the day to go in & out her house. Those hornets was don’t start none, won’t be none. My grandmother had a spectacular garden with those hornets around though (yellowjackets hornets diet consists primarily of nectar. They are excellent pollinators like bees.)
More bee facts: Bees use their honey cells like insulation for the hive by filling the outward combs of the hive and then huddling together. They will also use tree resin to make something called propolis, which they use to fill any gaps cracks or holes in the hive.
@@sylvesterstewart868 I mean it probably was a random genetic mutation that got them the ability to process resins, and if it gets them to reproduction, it carries on. Once bees started taking advantage of that trait, other nests with bees that didn’t have that ability may’ve lost sections of comb filled with larva, making their nests more vulnerable to mites, predators, or running out of honey in winter, which would give the bees with the ability to produce propolis a relative advantage. That’s my guess at least.
@@gregsalisbury9783 That's a good explanation of how basically any trait evolves. Random mutation proves useful, and so the creature is more likely to pass the trait on by virtue of surviving and reproducing. In the case of bees however, it is more complicated because the behaviour exhibited by workers is genetically coded within the queen, who is the only one reproducing. Additionally, the trait of sealing the hive with resin requires both the evolution of the ability to process the material *and* the behaviour of applying it! Neither adaptation would be useful without the other, so how do they independently evolve? It's fascinating. I'd love to hear an answer if someone has one!
@@theviewerofart There's probably some sort of intelligent design going on, even if scientists want to refute it, random genetics mutations alone is not enough to explain why it all evolved like this, and so precise too.
Insects are just amazing, like little biological robots. I get so annoyed with myself for taking life for granted when having the opportunity to study all of these incredible creatures is just so amazing.
Yeah if anyone is wondering why they haven’t seen many ladybugs at all this winter, it’s because the are all bloody congregating at my house.. My house is basically just a two-storey Ladybug commune at this point 💀😭🐞
This is so freaky. Yesterday as I got home I left my porch light on so I could see. A few bugs had slammed into my face because it’s now warm here In Florida after a couple weeks of 50 degree nights. I thought to myself where do bugs go when its cold or winter and today this video pulls up. RUclips can now read my mind. Really trippy.
I've had that feeling before. For example I was just talking to someone about this bug zapper thingo and came home to see this, but other times it has just been a thought. For all I know you I am a bug :(
Same, was just thinking this yesterday too. We've had a warm spell and I saw a butterfly in my backyard and it got me curious. I actually wondered if maybe I said something aloud that Alexa picked up lol. But it's just one of those things I guess, probably a lot of people wondering that right now.
@@senormoll thank you for putting it a lot better than I did. I live alone and didn’t say it out loud. But now that I think about it if a thought can be carried through language in sound why can’t the brainwaves do the same thing through air and be picked up by the phones.
@@senormoll Yeah I mean it makes complete sense for youtube to show you things that are obviously going to be happening around you and sparking your interest, combined with the fact that there's that much niche content, there's a chance for it to seem like an extreme coincidence
6:05 I LITERALLY HAVE THESE BEETLE SPECIES AS PETS!! Just try to imagine my surprisement that these fellas just appeared and were included, i've lived with this exact beetle species for 3 years.Imagine having a rare pet species and then someone just randomly shows it in a video. These are coelorrhina hornimani, native to Cameroon. They eat fruits and require a tropic athmosphere which i create inside their terrarium by spraying water vapor in there. They live up to a year as adults
My ex had a crack in the roof over the front door and every year inside her house in around october thousands of lady bugs would pour. In and sit immobile for months tjll it warmed up. Didnt remove them cause they didnt cause damage. And they never left there roost or moved. Pretty cool. Lots of good luck
From bees doing winter prep to centipede sex was a bit of a weird segway twist mid video but amazing footage and entertaining commentary, so I enjoyed it.
I love the scorpion reproduction process lmao imagine if people did something like that. Guy and girl just wrestle until the guy nuts on the floor, then points it out, and the girl drags her crotch over it.
I love it how these videos are (most likely / most at least) taken from actual documentaries of animal kingdom etc. and just cut / zoomed in enough so the logo / tv-channel is not visible and then added their own "Love Nature" logo on it :'D
I live on a small hill in Southern MASS. Surrounded by old Oak and Pine trees. So we have a ton of insects that stay the winter and come out in the spring. Queens of all different hornets and wasp. Yellow jackets etc. Anyway that also attracts the birds that eat bugs. I have a pair of Bluebirds that would stay at a motel 6 the eat so well in April/May. Pileated Woodpeckers and Flickers spend all day eating grubs and worms out of the ground and logs. 8-10 pairs of Robins. Couple of Catbirds. And these birds also attract Cowbirds. Cowbirds like to lay eggs in other birds nest. So I get to watch all my nesting birds chase away the cowbirds. It is funny seeing Bluebirds and Robins join forces and chase out a cowbird.
Thanks for watching! Which of these bug’s survival methods weirded you out the most?!
Out of all species, it’s still humans.
cosidering you never even talk about the bugs in winter ...
you're dumb .
The narrator is ok but the content is LOL
Really bad video! You never really talk about the winter time. So unprofessional. A least I weatched it with an add blocker.
also, your bee information was largely incorrect
half of this video has nothing to do with bugs in winter!
More about bugs doing the humpty dance
I agree this video is idiotic
I mean, sex does sells
That was a really abrupt switch to mating. Came out of nowhere ...
Seriously
I thought it was just me.. I was so confused 😳🤣
Those millipede macaroni noises really threw me off😭😭😭
that switch between seeing how bug do in the winter to seeing bug porn was crazy.
that switch between seeing how bug do in the winter to seeing bugs mating on my computer was crazy.
No matter how bad your day is, be glad you're not a bug.
Bugophobia
@@REHANKHAN-en5zn not really a phobia. Bugs just live horrifying lives.
@@bobdole7451 some aliens that live 1000 years probably saying they are glad they aren't humans that managed to get to 60
So that's same for bugs that short life will feel like ages to them
@@bobdole7451 Ok, horrorphobia then
the movie "is tough to be a bug"
This is one of the reasons why we need the dislike counter back. We came for bugs in winter and got sudden millipede foreplay instead
this
For real
To the person who is reading this,
You're amazing stay blessed, stay safe and have an amazing rest of your day!
@A Fox Called Scrappy Tail My pleasure!!
Thank you I really needed to hear this😊
@@tay8263 Hope youre going better my fellow human. Have a good day
I could have gone my whole life without seeing those millipedes mating but here we are
I have found over--wintering ladybugs twice in my life. Once in a friend`s cold front hall, and once under an outdoor porch mat, under the snow and ice. They appeared to be either sound asleep or dead both times. How ever if you place one in the palm of your warm hand, if it is alive still, it will begin to show signs of life after a few minutes. They do not all survive over-wintering. It was fascinating. I felt that it was my lucky day both times.
As a child we would turn over stones and discover them. Good fun. No video games tokeep us indoors.
Wouldn’t waking one up in the middle of winter almost certainly guarantee it’s death?
Found 1 bunch ladybugs resting in a jacket pocket of a scare crow, thought it was a food collection of a mouse weirded me out a bit to understand it afterwards after telling biology teacher
@@MrPartyplopper interesting! The Inuit used to keep an eye out for mouse food. Those would be caches of seeds a mouse had stored for winter. They’d enjoy it like trail mix. Warning to anyone in this exchange- Never put a ladybug in your mouth. This happened when I was picking raspberries. Your body will spit it out. You don’t even need to think about it. If a ladybug larvae drops on your skin from a tree, you will know it immediately. They start chewing.
Ladybug, ladybug
Fly away home.
Your house is on fire,
Your children may burn.
@@martinphilip8998 What an fab fact that is! :) I could go for some trailmix too right now, with some fire exstinguisher sause thanks
Good Video but it would be nice if you actually showed what they do to survive. As an example: Winter bees what do they do??
That's That's I was expecting
I have been feeding 50 female honey bees who are staying somewhere in my ceiling. Each day I prepare fresh nectar, puréed apple and lemon or orange juice with very finely chopped rind. They like organic coconut oil and anything I eat. I purée chicken and arugula with apples and red onion if I have that as a meal. Here’s why I’m here: baby spiders end up in the very tiny upside down espresso cups filled with nectar and it’s getting overwhelming. I can’t seem to find extra tiny glass containers for them to hibernate in the bees’ leftover nectar for the winter. I would ideally need a glass or China ice cube tray times 20 or so til spring. Oyyy.
Read my comment under the top comment, u will find the answer
@@zwekkerboy716 thank you, for some reason I only see two comments. Since I posted that, I’ve found small affordable containers so all is well. My problem then became tiny sized beautiful loving spiders were in the nectar at end of day. I tried the scoop method but I found it too risky that I may injure them who I’ve learned like to hibernate in nectar for the winter months. The great part is they’re all light bodies so they can be watching movies and coming along in the car if they so choose. Happy new year and thanks again for your thoughtfulness. Blessings.
this clip leaves me with more questions than answers.
I’m confused too. He went from saying the hornets feed the larva to the hornets throwing them on the ground outside. 🤔
@@B3ASTM0DE92 They feed the larva the bugs they catch and grind up in their mouths, and the larva basically spit out a sugary substance that the adults eat. The queen lays eggs that turn into larvae pretty much all year, so towards the end of the year, when they aren’t needed anymore, the workers throw those extras out. I don’t think they do a good job of describing how the rest of winter goes for any of these species tho lol. Like for the honeybees, they could’ve mentioned that they move around the hive in a ball between several frames, and that ball moves around the hive as they eat the honey in the cells of each frame. I don’t understand what happens to the European hornets, yellowjackets, and other wasps that don’t store food.
11min later still not sure how bugs survive the winter. But the bug porn was a pleasant surprise.
Hungry For Apples. Lol
It was tested in a simulation. 🤭
This is a reference to the show Rick and Morty, Season 1 Episode 4, "M. Night Shaym-Aliens"
I was way too high for this comment.
@@AzngameFreak03 still don't get it
Thank god for other witnesses
Jerry should’ve gone to the hornet timeline if he wanted to sell that “hungry for apple” pitch
Best comment ever 🏆
@@MusicLoverMN lol yes
It's kind of hilarious to hear new and inventive ways that hornets are assholes
Had one that kept me from connecting my garden hose in the back of my house all summer (asshole hornet 😆). Huge ass, mega hornet!! Obviously nested in the ground cause it was chasing everything off. My grandmother had yellow jackets hornets built a nest under her front porch. Those weren’t too bad other than changing different doors during the day to go in & out her house. Those hornets was don’t start none, won’t be none. My grandmother had a spectacular garden with those hornets around though (yellowjackets hornets diet consists primarily of nectar. They are excellent pollinators like bees.)
@@JJ-fq4nl i had a nest of hornets under my back door step that attacked my cats, they had to go
I like how halfway through the video it stops being about bugs surviving winter at all
0:32 As a certified scuba diver, I must say; I do not have wings, nor would I store oxygen under them if I had them.
They mean that they carry oxygen on their backs.
Seeing a bug hunt fish just doesn’t sit right with me
Crustaceans are basically bugs and eat fish all the time too.
More bee facts:
Bees use their honey cells like insulation for the hive by filling the outward combs of the hive and then huddling together. They will also use tree resin to make something called propolis, which they use to fill any gaps cracks or holes in the hive.
I wish someone could explain how all that evolved.
@@sylvesterstewart868 I mean it probably was a random genetic mutation that got them the ability to process resins, and if it gets them to reproduction, it carries on. Once bees started taking advantage of that trait, other nests with bees that didn’t have that ability may’ve lost sections of comb filled with larva, making their nests more vulnerable to mites, predators, or running out of honey in winter, which would give the bees with the ability to produce propolis a relative advantage. That’s my guess at least.
@@gregsalisbury9783 That's a good explanation of how basically any trait evolves. Random mutation proves useful, and so the creature is more likely to pass the trait on by virtue of surviving and reproducing.
In the case of bees however, it is more complicated because the behaviour exhibited by workers is genetically coded within the queen, who is the only one reproducing. Additionally, the trait of sealing the hive with resin requires both the evolution of the ability to process the material *and* the behaviour of applying it! Neither adaptation would be useful without the other, so how do they independently evolve? It's fascinating. I'd love to hear an answer if someone has one!
@@theviewerofart Didn’t think of that. My mistake. That is definitely fascinating.
@@theviewerofart There's probably some sort of intelligent design going on, even if scientists want to refute it, random genetics mutations alone is not enough to explain why it all evolved like this, and so precise too.
Insects are just amazing, like little biological robots. I get so annoyed with myself for taking life for granted when having the opportunity to study all of these incredible creatures is just so amazing.
"Everyone, what should we use as a segway?"
Love Nature: "Okayyyy"
"Every time?"
Love Nature: "*OKAYYY*"
This comment makes no sense but OKAYYYY.........
Am i missing the the joke here?
@@doriancondor7924 Narrator says "okay" when transitioning from beetle->hornet and from hornet->bee
This got me using my brain a lot harder than it should be.
The millipedes mating is so romantic! 😂
Honestly it's great to hear the narrator from the future is wild again, a very pleasant surprise indeed
The Future is Wild is staple of my childhood! I had two of the books, and still have one of them in my living room :)
@@supraguy4694 nice
Yeah if anyone is wondering why they haven’t seen many ladybugs at all this winter, it’s because the are all bloody congregating at my house.. My house is basically just a two-storey Ladybug commune at this point 💀😭🐞
I don’t know why this was so funny to me🤣
Same! I live in an old house and I keep finding them everywhere. It’s crazy!!!
Finally Jerry's target market reveals themselves at 0:54
White, Anglo-Saxox, Protestants. Yes, clearly.
"Theyre Hungry For Apples" 🍎 🍎
Jerry Smith: *Surprised Pikachu Face*
This is so freaky. Yesterday as I got home I left my porch light on so I could see. A few bugs had slammed into my face because it’s now warm here In Florida after a couple weeks of 50 degree nights. I thought to myself where do bugs go when its cold or winter and today this video pulls up. RUclips can now read my mind. Really trippy.
I've had that feeling before. For example I was just talking to someone about this bug zapper thingo and came home to see this, but other times it has just been a thought. For all I know you I am a bug :(
Same, was just thinking this yesterday too. We've had a warm spell and I saw a butterfly in my backyard and it got me curious. I actually wondered if maybe I said something aloud that Alexa picked up lol. But it's just one of those things I guess, probably a lot of people wondering that right now.
@@senormoll thank you for putting it a lot better than I did. I live alone and didn’t say it out loud. But now that I think about it if a thought can be carried through language in sound why can’t the brainwaves do the same thing through air and be picked up by the phones.
@@senormoll Yeah I mean it makes complete sense for youtube to show you things that are obviously going to be happening around you and sparking your interest, combined with the fact that there's that much niche content, there's a chance for it to seem like an extreme coincidence
I swear i passed by a bee nest on the way home and was thinking where are they now that is winter, after 2 hours home i see this. Ok
6:05 I LITERALLY HAVE THESE BEETLE SPECIES AS PETS!! Just try to imagine my surprisement that these fellas just appeared and were included, i've lived with this exact beetle species for 3 years.Imagine having a rare pet species and then someone just randomly shows it in a video.
These are coelorrhina hornimani, native to Cameroon. They eat fruits and require a tropic athmosphere which i create inside their terrarium by spraying water vapor in there. They live up to a year as adults
My ex had a crack in the roof over the front door and every year inside her house in around october thousands of lady bugs would pour. In and sit immobile for months tjll it warmed up. Didnt remove them cause they didnt cause damage. And they never left there roost or moved. Pretty cool. Lots of good luck
this is something that crosses my mind a few times every winter but forget to look up
actually kinda sad seeing the bees kick others out to starve or freeze.
it's basically what USA does to Syrian and Yemen kids.
@@tigrehermano We have no obligation to accept "refugees."
There was also no reason to get political.
@@Clown_the_Clown don’t take them, but neither should bomb them and shouldn’t starve them
@@tigrehermano blame Obama lmao, he was the one droning Syria.
@@tigrehermano the usa arent the one's starving people.
I like how it says what happens to bugs in the winter? But half the video is about mating.
"Hungry for Apple's" Love the Jerry reference from Rick and Morty😄🇬🇧👍
0:54 my man just referenced rick & morty and I dont think he even know it.
*snaps fingers* Yes.
The green beetles was having a royal rumble
😂😂😂
She holds still while he gets down to business! 😂
Nice Rick and Morty reference.
“Hungry for apples”-“Great!” “You’ve got it”. “Right.” “My man”……
“Game day bucket go boom!”
Great Rick and Morty callback✌🏿
From bees doing winter prep to centipede sex was a bit of a weird segway twist mid video but amazing footage and entertaining commentary, so I enjoyed it.
omg that’s what i thought 💭 😂
Instantly my mind goes to Pose….”Quake in fear children…Wintour is coming!” Lol
Nice your video 😁👍👍🤝🤝🙏🙏
I love the scorpion reproduction process lmao imagine if people did something like that. Guy and girl just wrestle until the guy nuts on the floor, then points it out, and the girl drags her crotch over it.
LOLOLOLOLOL!!!! You are funny, Supra Guy!!!
Hungry for apples 🍎🤣🤣🤣
Those who know will know
@Road Rover Rick and Morty
Beautiful video that has nothing to do with what happens to insects in the winter. No snow or cold in the video lol.
"Hmmm what happens to bugs during winter? Interesting." *Watches bugs have sex for 6 minutes*
This video knocked me out on my lunch break lmao
"Where do bugs go in the winter?"
Simple, they go back to hell where they came from.
Bees and Bumble Bees are cute..
This turned into “how bugs mate” real quick
“Damn nature…you scary!”
They probably go to the same place where my socks go when I put them in the dryer.
Omgoodness- the sound effects from Krull.
I loved the video. kind felt like a kid watching it
I love it how these videos are (most likely / most at least) taken from actual documentaries of animal kingdom etc. and just cut / zoomed in enough so the logo / tv-channel is not visible and then added their own "Love Nature" logo on it :'D
This transitioned from "Winter is Coming" to "How you doin'?"
Lol hungry for apples
❤سبحان الخالق العظيم رب العالمين❤
❤لا إله إلا الله الواحد الأحد الفرد الصمد الذي لم يلد ولم يولد ولم يكن له كفواً أحد❤
scorpion mating sounds both wild as hell and extremely dull and unsatisfying lol.
0.55 DID HE JUST REFERENCE RICK AND MORTY? 😂❤️
Male Scarab: Please bb i was protectin you
Female Scarab: no
Damn the female scorpion didn’t waste anytime no drink no date lmao
Wow we learned how two bug species survive winter, with bonus mating action. Back to Wikipedia I guess, rip no-dislike RUclips.
its 4 in the morning and im watching this
Bee ecology, science videos, science education, thank you.
Damn never knew they just kick the Queen out and leave her out to die like that…Life is tough for a bee
It's the wasps not bees
It's funny how simple insects remind me of people I know especially with how the narrator explains it. Lol
I hate bugs, but I respect them outside of my house.
Mating then getting kicked out....we have allot in common with bugs
Lol very true
damn.. scorpions really dancing with death, just for some scorpussy
Winter is coming 🐜 🐺
ladybugs used to always crowd on the ceiling of my grandmas laundry room... she would just vacccum them all off 😂 rip ladybugs
Amazing
centipede asmr isn't bad
It’s rough being a wasp at every angle.
That’s why they’re assholes!
Hated by everything and everyone...reminds me of a certain tribe that need laws everywhere to protect them from hate
I live on a small hill in Southern MASS. Surrounded by old Oak and Pine trees. So we have a ton of insects that stay the winter and come out in the spring. Queens of all different hornets and wasp. Yellow jackets etc. Anyway that also attracts the birds that eat bugs. I have a pair of Bluebirds that would stay at a motel 6 the eat so well in April/May. Pileated Woodpeckers and Flickers spend all day eating grubs and worms out of the ground and logs. 8-10 pairs of Robins. Couple of Catbirds.
And these birds also attract Cowbirds. Cowbirds like to lay eggs in other birds nest. So I get to watch all my nesting birds chase away the cowbirds. It is funny seeing Bluebirds and Robins join forces and chase out a cowbird.
They fly around drunk like, looking for flowers that don’t exist BECAUSE winter didn’t show up this year where I’m from.
Those hornets are Jerry Smiths target demographic
Why does the second narrator sound like Murdoc Niccals from Gorillaz?! 😂 love it
Millipedes have the best time to love, it's hours after all...
Winter comes…
Insects: this is to prove the worthiness of my existence
Humans: *grabs coat and slippers*
So honey bees are simps but hornets are alpha chads, ok check ✅
Poor ladybugs just sitting still waiting for the seasons to pass
Uh the milipede thing was adorable
The thumbnail made me think this was about wasp or hornets on cocaine and I was scared
No no thats just them in general
The 🥩🥩🥩 couldn't be higher..
This would be so amazing if you had CC in other languages where kids don't have access to such amazing learn material. Great at channel!
Nice to see wasps are a**holes to each other as well
If we could somehow get ants to forage insanely during winter, they could elimate most the bugs before Spring.
Messing with the balance of bugs can be dangerous tho. Honeybees are crucial to our life cycles and i can only imagine what other bugs are too!
That's a great way to destroy multiple ecosystems though
As dreadfully annoying as bugs are, they're all vital to the ecosystem.
Pest bugs on the other hand (cockroaches, cicadas) can all burn in hell.
Narrator: none of these workers will survive the winter.
Me: awwwww
2022
Geez, and I thought hornets were jerks before.
Hungry for apples. Ha
So, what we need to know, is how mosquitos come back after every winter. More importantly, how do we stop it? lol...
I think they hide in crevices...like flies.
Hungry for apples
Toooop good luck..
I only found out what maybe 2 bugs do in the winter. Bees and ladybugs.
4:40 I’ve never in my life seen a group of ladybugs
2:58 Alright bud, you had one too many honey shots, you gotta go!
Lol, I was actually wondering about this a while ago!
Oh no…. They left the Hornet Queen to die in the cold? It sucks to be hornet 🐝.
Thx for video this should have more views meanwhile dumb tik tok videos get millions
People think throwing 1 plastic paper on the ground won’t harm the planet ,now imagine 1 million people think this way …