Contacting a local beekeeper for relocation removal is the procedure to follow if bees form hives or nests in trees.
No. A swarm of bees will only form a hive where a cavity in the tree already exists.
they can make a hive in at lest 4 days
A 'hive' is an artificial home for bees provided by a beekeeper. Bees living wild in a tree would normally be described as a colony.
A colony when in a hive, or a swarm when hanging in a cluster from a tree branch.
honey bees live in hive on the tree
We have a cypress tree in the back pasture and it has had a honey bee hive in it for the last 5 years.
you would have to find a hole in a tree or bee hive an cut it for bees to come out!! do not try this at home!!
If a swarm of bees makes a home in a tree in your garden, you can telephone a bee keeper to take the colony to another hive.
Honey bees live in a nest, often called a 'hive.' One hive can hold up to 80,000 bees, most of them workers. It is often located in a hollow tree. The hive is made of honeycomb, which are tightly packed hexagonal cells made of beeswax. They use the hive to store food and house their young.
a bee hive
Honey bees take resins from tree buds and mix it with wax to produce a sticky substance they use to coat surfaces in the hive and to seal small cracks. In this form it is called propolis.
Yea it sounds like you have a bee hive... You can contact a local pest/bug control place and some will take care of it for you