As usual at this time of year we have people on worried about having a bumblebee ‘hive’ in their garden.‘Are they dangerous?’‘Should I have them removed?’‘Will they be there forever?’Here’s a quick #bumblebee #lifecycle thread to explain
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As usual at this time of year we have people on worried about having a bumblebee ‘hive’ in their garden.
‘Are they dangerous?’
‘Should I have them removed?’
‘Will they be there forever?’
Here’s a quick #bumblebee #lifecycle thread to explain.
Please #repost / #share for the #bees.
1/14@thebeeguy
We love our bees; bumble bees, blue orchard bees, mason bees. We have so many, with 4 pollinator patches on the north, gentle north facing slopes, Mason Bee houses on the garage, a stack of drying Port Orford Cedar by the garden beds that they have colonized, & many fruit trees.We started learning about them when we planted fruit trees that were not bearing much fruit. Now, we have bumper crops. Honey bees are not active early enough to pollinate our fruit trees.
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As usual at this time of year we have people on worried about having a bumblebee ‘hive’ in their garden.
‘Are they dangerous?’
‘Should I have them removed?’
‘Will they be there forever?’
Here’s a quick #bumblebee #lifecycle thread to explain.
Please #repost / #share for the #bees.
1/14@thebeeguy I love working in my tiny cucumber patch along with the bumblebees.
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@thebeeguy I love working in my tiny cucumber patch along with the bumblebees.
Love the bees! They seem to go completely insane drunk on magnolia blossom stamens! Rolling around in the stamens, digging around, and even falling out of the blossoms at times. So fun to watch!
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As usual at this time of year we have people on worried about having a bumblebee ‘hive’ in their garden.
‘Are they dangerous?’
‘Should I have them removed?’
‘Will they be there forever?’
Here’s a quick #bumblebee #lifecycle thread to explain.
Please #repost / #share for the #bees.
1/14@thebeeguy I would love to have a bumblebee nest in my yard.
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As usual at this time of year we have people on worried about having a bumblebee ‘hive’ in their garden.
‘Are they dangerous?’
‘Should I have them removed?’
‘Will they be there forever?’
Here’s a quick #bumblebee #lifecycle thread to explain.
Please #repost / #share for the #bees.
1/14@thebeeguy gibt es etwas Süßeres als einen bestäubten Hummel-Po?
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As usual at this time of year we have people on worried about having a bumblebee ‘hive’ in their garden.
‘Are they dangerous?’
‘Should I have them removed?’
‘Will they be there forever?’
Here’s a quick #bumblebee #lifecycle thread to explain.
Please #repost / #share for the #bees.
1/14@thebeeguy I absolutely want as many bumblebees as possible in my garden.
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…when it comes to nesting.
They are not aggressive and not interested in you.
They will not sting (preferring flight over fight) unless you persistently threaten them or accidentally stand on one or squash one.
#Bumblebees do not swarm - you will notice much coming and…
10/14
#bees #worldbeesanctuary@thebeeguy I once had a bumblebee nest which I discovered when I went to move the compost bin early one spring. The bumblebees were *super* angry but in an exceptionally cute way but also I did not want to mess with those wee fellas. The compost bin stayed put for a few months longer.
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Enjoy them.
Celebrate them.
(They’ll be gone by winter and you’ll miss them!)If you like eating #apples you need bees!
Please #repost / #share for the bees.
The more people learn about #bees the better chance they have of thriving.
Thanks folks.



14/14
#nature #worldbeesanctuary*If you like and appreciate this messaging please consider becoming a patron of/donating to World Bee Sanctuary.
Link in bio.
This isn’t a side hustle. We do this full time with no safety net!
All in for bees.This is a great guide.
I would also add that most people cannot tell a bumble bee from a carpenter bee.
If it has a shiny tush and came out of a hole in a wooden fence, then it's a carpenter bee.
Carpenter bees are solo bees but they may live in a little "neighborhood" they can drill holes in wood. If you don't want them to do this fill the holes and paint the wood!
They also pollinate flowers and as long as they aren't putting holes in a structural beam they are good.
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This is a great guide.
I would also add that most people cannot tell a bumble bee from a carpenter bee.
If it has a shiny tush and came out of a hole in a wooden fence, then it's a carpenter bee.
Carpenter bees are solo bees but they may live in a little "neighborhood" they can drill holes in wood. If you don't want them to do this fill the holes and paint the wood!
They also pollinate flowers and as long as they aren't putting holes in a structural beam they are good.
To be clear carpenter bees need wood with a surface exposed to the outside to make their holes. These holes are L-shaped and a few inches long. If a beam is painted or stained they will avoid it ... unlike termites they can't mine deep into a house. Floor boards joists and beams inside of walls are not interesting to them. They want a view of flowers from their hole. So a wood surface exposed to an area with lots of flowers will attract them.
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To be clear carpenter bees need wood with a surface exposed to the outside to make their holes. These holes are L-shaped and a few inches long. If a beam is painted or stained they will avoid it ... unlike termites they can't mine deep into a house. Floor boards joists and beams inside of walls are not interesting to them. They want a view of flowers from their hole. So a wood surface exposed to an area with lots of flowers will attract them.
They have been putting holes my mom's fence for two decades and it's still functional as a fence.
I have heard about them causing problems with barns, but I really wonder if it was all the bees fault. They will reuse old holes year after year. They don't eat wood, they just use it as shelter to raise their babies.

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Enjoy them.
Celebrate them.
(They’ll be gone by winter and you’ll miss them!)If you like eating #apples you need bees!
Please #repost / #share for the bees.
The more people learn about #bees the better chance they have of thriving.
Thanks folks.



14/14
#nature #worldbeesanctuary*If you like and appreciate this messaging please consider becoming a patron of/donating to World Bee Sanctuary.
Link in bio.
This isn’t a side hustle. We do this full time with no safety net!
All in for bees.They are so nice to have around in the garden and they really appreciate our lavender and thyme in return.
Is there a recommended design for nesting boxes?
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They have been putting holes my mom's fence for two decades and it's still functional as a fence.
I have heard about them causing problems with barns, but I really wonder if it was all the bees fault. They will reuse old holes year after year. They don't eat wood, they just use it as shelter to raise their babies.

@futurebird @thebeeguy Love these guy. They make holes in the posts on my deck, too, but they're so charming, somehow. I guess if I thought the deck was going to fall apart due to their activity I'd feel differently, but so far it's not that many holes!
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Enjoy them.
Celebrate them.
(They’ll be gone by winter and you’ll miss them!)If you like eating #apples you need bees!
Please #repost / #share for the bees.
The more people learn about #bees the better chance they have of thriving.
Thanks folks.



14/14
#nature #worldbeesanctuary*If you like and appreciate this messaging please consider becoming a patron of/donating to World Bee Sanctuary.
Link in bio.
This isn’t a side hustle. We do this full time with no safety net!
All in for bees.@thebeeguy I love having them in the garden, found this little guy asleep in the amaranth.

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They have been putting holes my mom's fence for two decades and it's still functional as a fence.
I have heard about them causing problems with barns, but I really wonder if it was all the bees fault. They will reuse old holes year after year. They don't eat wood, they just use it as shelter to raise their babies.

@futurebird @thebeeguy Though I've learned to be careful about grabbing pieces of wood that have been sitting outside for a while!
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@thebeeguy I call this a boostable executive summary

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This is a great guide.
I would also add that most people cannot tell a bumble bee from a carpenter bee.
If it has a shiny tush and came out of a hole in a wooden fence, then it's a carpenter bee.
Carpenter bees are solo bees but they may live in a little "neighborhood" they can drill holes in wood. If you don't want them to do this fill the holes and paint the wood!
They also pollinate flowers and as long as they aren't putting holes in a structural beam they are good.
-
Enjoy them.
Celebrate them.
(They’ll be gone by winter and you’ll miss them!)If you like eating #apples you need bees!
Please #repost / #share for the bees.
The more people learn about #bees the better chance they have of thriving.
Thanks folks.



14/14
#nature #worldbeesanctuary*If you like and appreciate this messaging please consider becoming a patron of/donating to World Bee Sanctuary.
Link in bio.
This isn’t a side hustle. We do this full time with no safety net!
All in for bees.@thebeeguy awesome thread, thanks!
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As usual at this time of year we have people on worried about having a bumblebee ‘hive’ in their garden.
‘Are they dangerous?’
‘Should I have them removed?’
‘Will they be there forever?’
Here’s a quick #bumblebee #lifecycle thread to explain.
Please #repost / #share for the #bees.
1/14@thebeeguy fun read! Out of interest, what separates a queen bee from a regular female bee, biologically speaking?
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As usual at this time of year we have people on worried about having a bumblebee ‘hive’ in their garden.
‘Are they dangerous?’
‘Should I have them removed?’
‘Will they be there forever?’
Here’s a quick #bumblebee #lifecycle thread to explain.
Please #repost / #share for the #bees.
1/14@thebeeguy I love bumblebees. In Danish we call them "humlebi" which translates to hops-bee. They like cute winged micro bears.
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R relay@relay.infosec.exchange shared this topic