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The Bee Guy

It’s that time of year - people asking us about - WHY THEY’RE SEEING THEM ON THE GROUND - so here’s a thread to explain what they’re up to.
Please .
Every that survives means a new colony that gets to exist & produce new queen for next year!
So this is important to share.
Thank you.
1/9

Spoiler Alert!
Quick version:
Queens just out of hibernation.
Hungry and house-hunting.
Rest often between flights.
Don’t move or help for an hour unless in immediate danger!
Flowers best option.
50/50 white sugar/water next best option - NOT HONEY!
Don’t bring her inside.
2/9

queens emerge in early spring from and immediately need to feed - that’s why early flowering plants are so important. Apart from feeding their mission at this time is to find a suitable site to establish a nest. Hence you will observe queens flying low…
3/9

…to the ground zig-zagging across the landscape - they’re house-hunting. Stopping to explore in long grass and vegetation, hollows in trees, stone walls, under sheds and even compost heaps. During this time queens spend a lot of their time resting between flights. 4/9

These ‘between flight stopovers’ can last for up to an hour and are not always careful about where they take them - sometimes the middle of a footpath can be the ‘ideal’ spot! So if you see a big chilling on the ground don’t always presume she needs rescuing!
5/9

As with sleeping dogs leave resting lie - for up to an hour before intervening. (Unless of course she is in imminent danger whereby she should be carefully moved to a safe place). However if after about an hour she is still present then she may need assistance.
6/9

In this case preference is to move her to a nearby source of - a !
If no flowers are nearby she can be offered a 50/50 mix of white sugar and water.
NEVER offer her honey as although it would seem to be the obvious action honey can contain pathogens that may…
7/9

..be harmful to . Usually once she takes on some sugars & heats up she’ll happily fly off. Don’t bring her indoors for long periods! If she has already established a nest and laid eggs she needs to get back to sit on them to keep them warm - yes just like a hen!
8/9

Thank you for reading and caring.
PLEASE .
Don’t just like, .
The more informed, the more queens survive and the more we have.
Simple.
Our native wild are in serious trouble and we need to be there for them every way we can.
Thanks again for helping!
For caring.
For sharing.
A little bit of good in a world that so needs it.
🌍🐝🙏🏼
9/9

@thebeeguy very good thread. useful information for people who may be used to caring for dazed honey bees.

also, full of lovely bumblebee videos!

@thebeeguy is there anything I can do in the garden to provide a good place for a queen to make a nest?

@karpour @thebeeguy

I see bumblebees flying all year round in my garden (south of France), as soon as there's a ray of sunshine. I have flowers even in winter: violets, Daphne, Arbutus, Helebore, Lamium...
I also have old stumps for nests.

@cptcv @thebeeguy I live in apartment but also help my parents with their garden. This year I have very big planters outside my windows, I wonder if I could put something in my planters that bumblebees can use as a hive, or if that/s a bad idea. In any case, I will put a dish with water and rocks there, as summers tend to get hotter and dryer!

@thebeeguy I watched every video in this thread - fascinating to know what is happening with your commentary. I would have that this bee was an average bee, never a Queen! And I would have assumed it was lost and didn’t know where to return. Truly great you’ve shared this.

@thebeeguy if you feed bees simple syrup, use warm water to dissolve the sugar, not boiling. If the solution gets too hot it can create chemicals harmful to the bees.

@thebeeguy

Question: coming back from doing the groceries one day I found a bumblebee on the ground in a raised municipal plant area. It was being attacked by ants. I removed it from that area and placed it across the street, on a small grassy area with plants. I didn't have sugar and water on me (might be good to carry at least some sugarwater around), and I felt I wasn't doing enough. What would have been a better thing to do?

@thebeeguy We don't have bumblebees in Australia and I feel terribly deprived.

@thebeeguy Thank you for this helpful thread. Tagging for #SolarPunkSunday.

@thebeeguy @catselbow Found a rather disoriented BB in my kitchen the other day (it came in whilst my window was open the night before). Opening a window did not encourage it to leave. Another BB flew up from outside (perhaps trying to help?). I got a GandT glass and managed to trap it inside and then managed to move it to the open window where it was able to escape and join its mates. The GandT glass broke in the process, sacrificed in the service of bee-dom.

@thebeeguy good luck to every single fluffy nonsence creature, may they find yummy food.

@thebeeguy Some of the bumblebees that nest on our property have come out recently & are happily feeding on several of our early Spring flowers 🙂

@thebeeguy

It must be super nice to have this jet-pack strapped to your back and just casually be like 'yeah I'll fly a bit to there' instead of walking the whole 3 cm.

@thebeeguy
I also love the sound of their wings! I like to hold my hand under a flying one, you can really feel the air flow, they are such lovely creatures.

@thebeeguy A couple of weeks ago I left a mattress cover tied between two washing lines to dry, and forgot about it until bed time. Brought it in and threw it onto my bed, and with a stuttering buzz a sleepy bee fell out on my bedroom floor.

I found something to pick it up and took it outside to leave it in a pot full of crocuses, which were doing really well at the time