I feel the only good bee is a dead one.
Bumble bees are solitary bees. That is, they don't have a large hive with workers. Each female is a "queen" bee. Their hive is a single small structure, not extended combs AND they don't make honey.They are impressive wild pollenators, visiting about 100X more flowers per day than a honey bee. The only downside is bumblebees are very selective as to which flowers they visit, unlike honeybees which hit up a huge variety of flowers.In short, they're different but really awesome bees.(BTW, over 90% of stings are due to hornets and wasps--the predators of the bee world)
Mr. Whippy, that's awesome. I used to love watching the bee keepers at the local craft fairs. And I love honey comb. Awesome stuff. We had to be pretty careful with bees around the house when I was younger and now because my sister and now my niece are allergic to stings, but I love watching them. And there are these huge bees of some kind that are really neat...they seem to literally drill into the wood of support beams at my sis' house. You can see the little wood dust being kicked up. They're neat. Good for you...that looks like a lot of work but a lot of fun.
Quote from: GraysonK on May 02, 2010, 04:10:15 PMMr. Whippy, that's awesome. I used to love watching the bee keepers at the local craft fairs. And I love honey comb. Awesome stuff. We had to be pretty careful with bees around the house when I was younger and now because my sister and now my niece are allergic to stings, but I love watching them. And there are these huge bees of some kind that are really neat...they seem to literally drill into the wood of support beams at my sis' house. You can see the little wood dust being kicked up. They're neat. Good for you...that looks like a lot of work but a lot of fun. Carpenter bees. Cool critters and ALSO really important wild pollenators. They say the holes are not really structural and just cosmetic damage--seems like serious holes to me...
That's really intersting. Mr. W. I have always thought Bees were really interesting. Those are some cool pics. A quick question. I grew up in upstate NY and then moved down to western NC. There is a type of Bee or Wasp here that no one can tell me what it is. It's the biggest bee I have ever seen. Looks like a yellow jacket the size of your pinky finger. Scared me to death the first time one flew at my head. Any ideas what it is?
Quote from: prime77 on May 02, 2010, 06:33:05 PMThat's really intersting. Mr. W. I have always thought Bees were really interesting. Those are some cool pics. A quick question. I grew up in upstate NY and then moved down to western NC. There is a type of Bee or Wasp here that no one can tell me what it is. It's the biggest bee I have ever seen. Looks like a yellow jacket the size of your pinky finger. Scared me to death the first time one flew at my head. Any ideas what it is?First time we saw one, we thought some portal to hell must have opened up on the farm. Called the County Extension Office:Cicada Killer Wasp. Huge and essentially passive (except to Cicadas ). They sting them to paralyze them, lay eggs in them and bury them (Like Aliens! ).Next time I see one at rest, I'll try to get a picture.
That is pretty cool Mr. W. Bees fascinate me.How many times have you been stung so far?