Chunky Milk wrote:
Bunk, Gavjack Bunk wrote:
Chunky Milk wrote:
Bunk, Gavjack Bunk wrote:
CHED wrote:
how much did it cost to get the hives and bees?
Bees are essentially wild, so they do wild animal stuff and that includes just deciding to leave sometimes. Luckily not too often and you can apparently kind of tell when they're thinking about doing that.
How can you tell - do they start packing their shit up? (Not literally but I'm assuming they do something to this nature?)
if you like, to keep your hives in ways where either they don't swarm or you make sure you're ready for when it does swarm and you recapture the swarmed bees, which actually can be a lot easier than you would imagine.
Fuck Bunk every answer is very informative however they keep raising more questions! How exactly do you recapture a swarm of bees?
(If you really cbf answering btw just say so and ill search it up myself. Just thought if anything explaining may actually help you remember all this stuff and become more knowledgeable in the subject whilst helping the litheye community in the process)
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Well a swarm of bees is doomed on it's own. It needs to find a place to live, away from things that would eat bees.
When a hive swarms the queen is flying. This is one of the two times a queen will fly. The other is soon after birth, for mating purposes. The queen is also larger than the normal bees. So basically you have this big bee, that has very little flying experience. She's not very good at it.
So she leaves the hive and will get tired pretty quick, so typically she will just go for the first piece of dark shade she sees, drainpipe, tree limb, house eves, anything like that. Once there, all the bees will land with her and there they sit. Scouts are sent out from there to find a good place for a home. Once the scouts are back and the voting is done, the swarm will move to the proposed home and try to make a home out of it, or maybe just set up home right there where they first landed.
In addition to this, bees are "friendly". That is, they're not generally aggressive. A bee will really only sting you in defense of the hive, or if you leave it no other choice like capturing it in your closed hands or inadvertently in your shirt.
A swarm is, as I say, bees with no hive. They left that hive, they don't have one, if they don't have one, they can't sting you in defense of it. In that respect a swarm of bees is the most placid and timid state you will ever hope to find bees. Since they will be clumsily clinging to whatever the queen landed on, they are likely easily removed from it.
The procedure for catching bees is varied on the situation, but the simplest case is a bee swarm in a tree hanging usually to the underside of a branch or limb.
1. Get a box.
2. Cut a hole in the box. (An air hole, but I wanted a dick in the box reference here)
3. Put the box under the bees.
4. Pull the branch down.
5. Let go of the branch.
6. Quickly put the lid on the box before they get time to figure out what just happened and fly off.
If the remaining uncaptured bees cling to the branch, you failed, the queen is still up there, try again. If they cling to the box, well done, you just caught a swarm. Take it to a new hive and tip the bees into it.
It's funny if you find that the bees weren't a swarm and they were living wild with comb attached to the tree though, because that's bees with a hive and when you twang the branch they will fuck your shit right up.