Wait until they're all dead.
No. If there are still some bees alive, you can get seriously stung. And Trying to move the hive will make the bees madder.
If you have a beekeeper in the area, they will come and remove the bees for you. If you can't get in touch with a beekeeper, an exterminator can come out and remove the bees. Honey bees are important to the environment, and shouldn't be killed unless it is a last resort.
A group pf bees is called a colony - or a swarm (if they're outside the hive).
No, bees, being insects, lay eggs. The eggs stay outside the bees' bodies to grow and not inside like a human pregnancy.
Tell them to move
Yes. Example sentence: We could hear the bees buzzing outside our window.
Yes.
It is stupid, but you can. Just make sure to remove the stinger. unless you like your tongue swollen. And make sure to know where the nearest hospital is located.
One possible answer is that bees are attracted to bright lights, even at night. If there is a beehive anywhere near your house, and you have a porchlight on at night, bees may be attracted to the light and then not be able to find their way back to the hive. So they die in the evening chill. or run out of fuel flying around the light all night, and then collapse. You could try putting your porchlight on a motion sensor, and see if that helps to alleviate the problem.
To get rid of bees in a dead stump, consider hiring a professional beekeeper or pest control expert to remove the bees safely. Attempting to remove them yourself can be risky. They will have the experience and equipment needed to relocate the bees without harming them or your property.
Bees do not die when they have their honey taken out of them since they do not have honey inside their bodies.
I blocked entrance from the bees entering in to wall outside. will the queen bee die