winnipeg-bugline.com
Sponsored Bee Hives Results:

Location Of Bees: Bee Hives, Queen Bee, Precautions, Pest And Disposal

By:

Published: September 28, 2007

The business of beekeeping is something practically anyone can afford doing. This is because bee hives can be set up in nearly any imaginable place. No one need be thoroughly armed with various bee hives implements to go into the business of keeping bee hives, either.

Nevertheless, some simple guidelines about keeping bee hives do need to be observed if they are to grow and prosper. For example, location of bees inside, specifically the queen bee, should be a major concern. The queen bee, after all, is responsible for producing bees that will eventually create more hives.

Actually, once the queen is identified, the location of bees in general gets established as well. Often, the queen is much larger when compared with other bees inside the hives. A typical queen will usually be chosen by the bees themselves based on the sugar level found on the food the queen provides for the developing bee larvae. The food the queen gives usually contains about 35 percent sugar, of which should be good enough for the bee to be proclaimed head of the bee hives.

Bee hives are often pictured as holes in tree trunks where the bees eventually make their nests. Yet, these are the wild types of hives which are essentially quite different from the many types of artificially-made bee hives; many beekeepers have come to develop these artificial hives in order to go into the business of marketing naturally-produced honey.

In these man-made bee hives, the bees are known to attach wax combs on the walls and on the roofs, making them appear much like wild bee hives. Once the bees are satisfied with how the hives look, they start building the combs which contain cells where honey is eventually stored.

The act of extracting produced honey from bee hives is not exactly convenient. Precautions generally need to be taken so the bee hives do not end up getting damaged or destroyed. Additional precautions also need to be taken during the extraction process, because this will likely upset the bees living inside the bee hives. One or two stings is a common experience, and although these are generally not fatal, they can be rather painful to say the least.

Unfortunately, not all bees and their accompanying bee hives are considered beneficial to man. Some types of bees, particularly the Africanized bees, are known to be killers and largely considered as pests. In such cases, a removal or disposal of the bee hives that the flying pest has consequently built, usually on old tree barks, may have to occur.

Once the bee is seen as a nuisance, often causing harm and injury to people, pest control specialists will have to be called upon. Often, the method employed by these experts for a disposal of the bees go beyond merely killing the insect. It also involves trying to identify the location of bees and their beehives, identifying the queen bee, and employing the proper disposal system, before finally disinfecting the area to avoid the occurrence of future pest visitations.


Sources:
"Queen." Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). WGBH Educational Foundation. 26 Sept. 2007. http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/nova/bees/hivequee.html.
"American Beekeeping History The Bee Hive." John Caldeira. 24 Jan. 2007. John's Beekeeping Notebook. 26 Sept. 2007. http://outdoorplace.org/beekeeping/history1.htm.
"Deciding Where to Locate Your Bee Hives." Beekeeping For Dummies. Beginning Beekeeping. Web Ring Inc. 26 Sept. 2007. http://www.beginningbeekeeping.com/LocatingYourBee hive.html.

"Bee Control." Abolish Pest Control Co. 26 Sept. 2007. http://www.abolishpestcontrol.com/bee_xtra01.html.
Featured Bee Hives Products: