Yes.
This is a silly question. If you have a hive of bees then they don't fly south for the winter. they make honey to live on during winter time >>. they stay at home.
hive
Honey bees live in a hive, bumble bees live in a nest.
Beekeepers keep bees in a hive and more than one hive is known as an apiary.
A hive
Usually none, all the working bees are infertile females. Only when the hive is about to swarm a number of drones (male bees) are hatched. Around 1% of the bees in a colony during the season are male. Only during winter are there no males in the colony.
A hive is something that bees live in. It can also be "a place in which people are busily occupied."
# in a hive # pollen and nectar
No. Bees live in hives. They lay their eggs in the hive.
Drones, a queen, and workers are the bees that live in a hive. The drone is a male whose purpose is to mate with the queen or to perish during the winter in the event of not realizing the latter agenda. Worker bees operate as non-queen females whose responsibilities include caring for broods, foraging, and laying eggs which develop into drones or in females in special instances of queen-less hives.
It can vary between 5000 in winter to as much as 80000 at the height of the season (May/June in Western Europe).
Hive