Waynesville Man Drives 40 Miles With 3,000 Bees In Truck (AUDIO)
Yes, you read that correctly and you’re probably wondering why. A Waynesville man was bringing about 18,000 bees from Wild Mountain Bees in Weaverville. He left the bees in the…

JOHNSTON, IL – AUGUST 21: Traffic is backed up in the northbound lanes of Interstate 57 following the solar eclipse on August 21, 2017 near Johnston, Illinois. With approximately 2 minutes 40 seconds of totality the area in Southern Illinois experienced the longest duration of totality during the eclipse. Millions of people watched the eclipse as it cut a path of totality 70 miles wide across the United States from Oregon to South Carolina on August 21. (Photo by Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Photo by Scott Olson/Getty ImagesYes, you read that correctly and you're probably wondering why.
A Waynesville man was bringing about 18,000 bees from Wild Mountain Bees in Weaverville. He left the bees in the truck when going into a restaurant. Next thing you know, the bees were all over the truck.
What would you do? Run, right?
That's what we thought - but not this man. He didn't want to lose his bees so he drove to where he needed to go with the bees still lose in his car.
The best part? He didn't get stung. Not once!
All of us here at MRL would have been abandoning ship if that had happened to one of us so we decided to ask the question - what made you pull over and get out of your car? Was it spiders, a bee or something else?