yes
It's easy because their lacrosse team isn't very good
The duration of Good Cheer is 1200.0 seconds.
Yes, bears are known to eat yellow jackets as part of their diet. Yellow jackets are a good source of protein for bears, especially during times when other food sources may be scarce. Bears will often dig up yellow jacket nests to access the larvae and pupae inside.
Good Cheer was created on 1926-01-10.
Cheer is a verb (the crowd cheered) and a noun (full of good cheer).
"fine teen" rhymes with "nineteen". Of course, you can have the preceding verse end in any word that rhymes with just the "teen" in "nineteen".
Yes, but it probably won't do any good. Yellow jackets almost always have a second hole (an evacuation route as you might say). Even if they don't, they can burrow out a new hole and escape before the end of thier life span. Find the hole and mark it with something bright that you can see at night. After dark, approach the hole and spray a whole can of hornet killer down the hole. No more yellow jackets in the morning, guaranteed!
Insects such as yellow jackets do not have nearly as detailed vision as we do. They have compound eyes which are useful for detecting motion but not very good at resolution. Of course, vision does not only involve eyes, it also involves the visual center of the brain, and the tiny brains of insects could not really interpret a detailed visual perception even if their eyes were good enough to produce one.
Yellow Jackets: Yellow jackets are small (half-inch long) wasps marked with yellow. Colonies are initiated by overwintering queens that make paper nests underground, but occasionally in hollow trees, wall voids and attics or on a branch over a stream. A fully developed nest may contain from a few hundred to many thousand adults. Yellow jackets feed on a variety of pest insects, but will also forage for meat or soft drinks at picnic, camp and garbage sites. This habit often brings them into close association with people. Good sanitation in picnic areas can help reduce problems with these pests. Solitary scavenging yellow jackets are usually non-aggressive unless handled, but become very aggressive as a group if they believe their nest is threatened. Yellow jackets will vigorously pursue an intruder who threatens their nest and are generally considered the most dangerous of the social insects. I cant post the picture for you, but yeah these little guys chased me tonight when i was mowing my yard and one got me....little sucker.
Good Cheer - 1926 was released on: USA: 10 January 1926
Be of good cheer it is you be not afraid!!!