Open the hive and look.
the bees that take care of the hive and make honey called?" the guardian bees of the hive they take car of the bee hive. the bees that take care of the hive and make honey called?" the guardian bees of the hive they take car of the bee hive.
It can happen. They won't sting members of their own colony, but if bees from another colony try to enter the hive to steal the honey the guard bees will sting them. A newly-emerged queen will go around the hive looking for other queen cells. If she finds any she will sting through the cell walls to kill the developing queen inside them.
The bees are not special but the flowers are in the making of Manuka Honey. In the uncultavated wilderness the Manuka tree starts to flower and the bees are attracted to the flowers and so starts the adventure. This honey is special because the flower has chemicals that mix with the enzymes of the bee and are converted in the hive into a healling honey. The bees don't do anything different than they do in making any honey.
If you want a technical, scientific term, he is called an "apiarist". An apiologist is some one who studies bees. Any good apiarist (bee keeper) will be well versed in apiology (the study of bees). They practically have to be.
Honey bees spend approximately 10 days of their 6 week life span as 'house bees'. ie they act as cleaners and maintenance men looking after the hive (or nest in the wild). they tidy up after other bees, remove any debris and generally keep things clean and tidy. They also do any repairs to the combs that become necessary.
a bee hive
the bees that take care of the hive and make honey called?" the guardian bees of the hive they take car of the bee hive. the bees that take care of the hive and make honey called?" the guardian bees of the hive they take car of the bee hive.
They excrete it from the rear end of the abdomen. Honey bees do not defecate in the hive if they can possibly avoid doing so, they will take 'clearing' flights in the general area of the hive.
No, it is not safe to consume honey from a hive that has been sprayed with Raid or any other insecticide. The chemicals could contaminate the honey, making it harmful for consumption. It is important to avoid using insecticides near beehives to protect the bees and their honey.
There is Honey but there is honeycomb. To get it you need a torch which you can craft at any crafting table with 5 softwood. Then take it to Volcano Jungle on the third island and use the torch to smoke the bees away. Once you hive done this there isn't much time until the bees come back to there hives so drop the torch and start harvesting.
A hive is an artificial home for honey bees provided by a beekeeper. They can be bought at any beekeeping equipment supplier.
Worker bees will respond to any intrusion that they perceive as a threat to their hive or colony. That obviously includes any person, animal or insect attempting to remove their honey - which the bees need to live on. For example, you will often see a wasp being attacked at the entrance to a hive as the wasp tries to get in to steal honey. Beekeepers use a variety of methods to enable them to remove the honey from a hive without being attacked. One of the key ways is by inserting a board, just under the top box of a hive, with a sort of one-way entrance in it. Once the bees leave that box they are unable to get back in. Thus the beekeeper is able to remove the box of honey with most, if not all, of the bees gone from it.
Usually when I dispose of a good sized bee hive, I like to put some water on boil and toss the hive in there. Once the hive has melted into a chunky, honey-coated stew, I like to sprinkle a bit of sugar and some butter, to enhance the flavor. Then, just serve and enjoy. Usually a good sized hive is big enough to feed a family of 3.
They normally start by locating a dark enclosed, dry space (in a tree trunk, roof or wall cavity - or indeed a man made hive). The colony of bees including the queen move into this and the worker bees use honey that they have stored in their tummies as they left their original hive to make wax (bees wax). they chew up this wax and shape it into a new comb with hexagonal cells. The queen lays new eggs in this and the new colony starts. With more bees, more time, and more comb is produced to store honey and brood young and the new hive becomes established. A resinous substance collected from the buds of certain trees (called Propolis) is used by the bees as a cement or sealant to plug up any gaps in the the walls of the hive so that predators can not get in and the hive entrance is guarded by young workers.
We don't get rid of bee hives, we call a local bee club. They will come get them for free and maybe give you honey in trade. Bee hives have a great value beyond honey, its called pollination. A bee hive is not a swarm. A hive contains brood, honey, drones, workers and a queen, etc... A swarm is a group of bees and a queen looking for a new home. They are very easy to deal with and are a valuable asset to any beekeeper! So what ever the case, CALL A LOCAL BEEKEEPER! Keep the bees and don't pollute the honey with chemicals.
If bees are in a hive they must belong to a beekeeper so you really will be stealing if you rob it. In any case, bees don't take too kindly to having their larder raided and will react accordingly ie THEY WILL STING YOU!!
Yes. Honey is one of the purest forms of food available. Jars of honey bought in a supermarket have been processed so much that most of the natural nutrition is no longer there. But that applies to most processed foods.