08-04-2021, 05:55 PM
Bees breathe through spiracles, tracheae, and air sacs in their bodies like most other insects, not their legs. Sevin is toxic to bees. They collect and use it like pollen and it contaminates the bee bread, their food, that is made from pollen. A little bit of Sevin can kill an entire hive over time.
If bees build a hive in a building, killing them is not a good idea. Honey comb, honey and bee bread left behind will attract wax moths and other insects and make an even bigger mess.
Removing bees from a building (called a cut out) is NOT inexpensive because in most cases the wall needs to be opened up to remove the bees AND comb. Once everything is removed, it will have the scent of a bee hive and will attract another swarm. The space once occupied usually is filled with insulation to make the space less attractive to bees for a home. Depending on the size of the hive, removal can require extensive repair. Most beekeepers aren't carpenters so the may not be able to do the necessary repairs....but some are and do. A cut out can take several hours depending on the size of the hive and how much "demo" is required.
I've been a beekeeper for 12 years and do not do cutouts from buildings because I can't do the repairs. I'm not a carpenter.
To the non beekeeper bees, wasps, hornets are all the same. I understand that bees look scary when thousands of them are hanging from a tree branch after swarming. The truth is most of the time a swarm is quite docile and quite easy to capture and get to a proper hive box. I did it 4 times this spring.
Sorry for the long off topic post. I just want to pass on a tiny bit of what I have learned as a urban backyard beekeeper.
TonyC
If bees build a hive in a building, killing them is not a good idea. Honey comb, honey and bee bread left behind will attract wax moths and other insects and make an even bigger mess.
Removing bees from a building (called a cut out) is NOT inexpensive because in most cases the wall needs to be opened up to remove the bees AND comb. Once everything is removed, it will have the scent of a bee hive and will attract another swarm. The space once occupied usually is filled with insulation to make the space less attractive to bees for a home. Depending on the size of the hive, removal can require extensive repair. Most beekeepers aren't carpenters so the may not be able to do the necessary repairs....but some are and do. A cut out can take several hours depending on the size of the hive and how much "demo" is required.
I've been a beekeeper for 12 years and do not do cutouts from buildings because I can't do the repairs. I'm not a carpenter.
To the non beekeeper bees, wasps, hornets are all the same. I understand that bees look scary when thousands of them are hanging from a tree branch after swarming. The truth is most of the time a swarm is quite docile and quite easy to capture and get to a proper hive box. I did it 4 times this spring.
Sorry for the long off topic post. I just want to pass on a tiny bit of what I have learned as a urban backyard beekeeper.
TonyC