This is what happens when the public doesn't have any idea what honeybees are.
Have a few more photos but these are the most relevant to the sad situation.
This is what happens when the public doesn't have any idea what honeybees are.
Have a few more photos but these are the most relevant to the sad situation.
Sideline beekeeper /State Certified Inspector
Bee Friends CO-OP
That is sad. Most beekeepers would have came and got them for free. I'll bet they didn't even bother to dispose of the comb (saturated with poison), in a way that other bees wouldn't get to it. This is exactly why I am thinking about volenteering at local schools to teach about honeybees.
That is ashame! I have had many times the same thing happen. People call me acting like that they love bees and they want me to remove them. But when I arrive there, there are 100's of them dead near entrance.
Paul Baumeister
Bee Control in Sacramento
Adding insult to injury...this photo was sent to me by a friend. It was part of the same series.....
It looks like this was a vigorous colony. This is tooooooo sad
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Dan www.boogerhillbee.com
Experience is a hard teacher because she gives the test first, the lesson afterwards
Good pictures of a sad situation...
I got this as an e-mail a few days ago.
Home of the ventilated and sting resistant Ultra Breeze bee suits and jackets
http://www.honeymoonapiaries.com
yikes!! I got this as an email today and posted pics in another thread
I left out the carnage
Dave
Got it few weeks ago with commentary about each picture. It seems to be making the rounds on email. It takes all kinds
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