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I heard the same thing too. So, good to know Thanks

A bee loses it's stinger, when it stings. It dies from that.
If you got stung by a bee, it's important to remove the stinger from your skin.

A wasp can sting you multiple times and will not lose it's stinger in the process.

This is a wasp, at least here it is. A bee is bigger and rounded, I see them every day. This is the same wasp I can see in my glass of beer. This wasp doesn't collect pollen from rosemary, in this time of year, rosemary doesn't have pollen at all. But strange crew of tiny flies were around this bush and that attracted this wasp.

Let it sting you for proof; If it doesn't lose its stinger, then it was a wasp :P

( I'm pretty sure it's a bee. )

Hahahaha, I was driving one of these in my car 70 kilometers, not nice ride. Honestly, from my own experience, wasps are feeding with nectar and sugar, we made our wasps very lazy.

Replying here because of comment depth.

Wasps feed on honey, too.
They raid beehives and steel the honey.
The don't go around from flower to flower to collect it tho.
They don't even have a trunk to get to the nectar. They have pincers instead.

I didn't get used to see a small bee like this one

Are you thinking of a bumblebee maybe ?

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bumblebee

No, bumblebee is fat motherfucker, bee is kinda more hairy of this