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Protective suite

5K views 15 replies 13 participants last post by  John D. 
#1 · (Edited)
I'm thinking of going with a pair of pants , and a jacket with a zip on veil , if I wore all three I would have complete protection until I get comfortable with my bees and then if the bees seem to be ok to work with or for a quick look I could go with just the jacket and veil . Also for swarms I might feel better with more protection as you never know the kind of bees you come across in a swarm . Is the seal between the pants and jacket bee proof .If I go with full coveralls I'd have no choice but to suite up completely every time.Any thoughts I have no experience with all the different gear. Thanks
 
#2 ·
If you want something cheap for "just in case" or temporary without spending $150 on a suit, go to Home Depot or Lowes in the paint dept. and get disposable coveralls for less than $15. Some have hoods and elastic at wrists and ankles, some are breathable. With a bit of duct tape, I'm in my 3rd year and still using the first one and I've never been stung through it--but it IS hot in hot weather. I wore it a lot the first year, last year only when I was harvesting or going all the way to the bottom. But if the bees get testy, its great to be able to throw it on. I wear rubber boots and tuck the pants into them. The one time I skipped the boots, I had bees crawling all over my ankles.
 
#6 ·
go to a "goodwill" or other thrift/resell/secondhand type store and get a long sleeve white shirt and a pair of white pants with both large enough to fit over street clothes
tuck the shirt in the waistband,tape the cuffs/legs and some heavy nitryl gloves and a veil and thats about as bulletproof as you can get and is cheap enough for anybody
 
#8 ·
Painter's coveralls = Multitasker for bee garb

I just ordered a set of painter's coveralls that work well with a bee jacket. I ordered them long and loose -you can sew the gaps up to the first set of buttons and the jacket gives plenty of overlap that way. Happy with the set up, just don't know how I would fair in an attack by ultra aggressive bees. Layers would be my friend and yours in that case. :)
 
#10 ·
Re: Painter's coveralls = Multitasker for bee garb

$46 on ebay, full suit plus gloves. I bought one because I have developed a small allergy to stings. I now breakout in hives around the sting sight. The suit has been great for me, this will be my second season using it.
 
#12 ·
Re: Painter's coveralls = Multitasker for bee garb

I have found a lot of variables that drive the mood of the bees. My best time of day is around 3 PM when a lot of bees are out foraging, not during derth period. I prefer a veil that goes onto one of the pith hats (hole in top with elastic) as it tends to not slip down and block my vision as much as the integrated hat/veil combo. Most of my inspections that only go into the top brood chamber I only wear jeans and a long sleeve T shirt (but have also done short sleeve). If I buy again I would get one of the inspector jackets, but I do have a coverall style I use on times when they are cranky and I need to go into both upper and lower brood chambers (mine is a cheap one off of eBay and I have had to sew up several seams due to cheap seam thread ). Oh yeah when wearing T shirts I also tie a bandanna around my neck to try and block any path into the veil. I had about 30 bees get inside my veil ONCE... I only had the bees go up my pant legs once when I accidentally moved the queen to a split I did, 2 days without a queen made the donor hive very cranky. My bees have taught me a lot in the last year, Mike Bush's book (and his support here) is outstanding, this website is a gold mine of information (learn data mining-search tools).
 
#13 ·
Re: Painter's coveralls = Multitasker for bee garb

I love my jackets with zip on veils. They are what I use most of the time. On a really hot day, or with a really hot hive, a full ventilated suit is wonderful, but I don't use them as often as the Jacket. I could get by fine with just the jacket.
 
#14 ·
laketrout, from the mouth of my mentor "If you mess with bees you're gonna get stung.". Simple. :) But, we do try to keep that to a minimum.

Blue jeans, white shirt, tennis shoes, and a veil...that's my usual attire. I do have a ventilated jacket "in case", but I seldom use it. In your area I'm not sure if you need a ventilated jacket or not...down here in south Alabama with our summer heat they are *very* nice to have.

My favorite veil is a Clear-Vue hat...cloth hat with wraparound screen...good vision through it. If I take the inner cover off a hive there's a 99.9% chance that I'm going to have a veil on. If I'm simply taking the outer cover off for some reason and not removing the inner cover (which is screened) I don't worry about a veil. I also have some straps to wrap around around my bluejeans at the ankles to keep the adventurous honey bee from crawling up my leg and giving me an adventure...these are kinda like the ventilated jacket in that I just use them once in a while.

Most stings that I get are on my hands. I've learned to deal with them...some are "hotter" than other stings...some I don't pay much attention to. Most hand stings naturally happen during inspections. Slow, deliberate hand movements made around the edges of the box (versus over the middle of the box) helps to reduce hand stings. Move slow and let the bees move out of your way...with a gentle push with a finger you can encourage them to move so you can lift a frame. I have at times move my hand across the center of a hive rather quickly and suddenly have several bees clinging to hand...almost looked like static electric drew them to my hand...they were there that quick!...but thankfully these were gentle bees and none (that time) stung me but were letting me know to slow down a bit (which I did). My mentor doesn't use gloves as he "feels" better without gloves and avoids mashing bees and irritating them. His best friend who's kept bees for over 75 years does use gloves...he says he can work bees faster with them. Pick your poison. :) There are leather gloves but a lot of folks are now using nitrile gloves which can be pretty much sting proof(?) but still get a good sense of touch...but will probably get rather sweaty.

At the $ figure that you've stated you're well on your way to the cost of a domestically produced ventilated jacket or an imported full suit....quality varies.

Best wishes,
Ed
 
#16 ·
I like a jacket for most stuff with a pullover or attached veil. Lately I have been getting stung through the suit so I bellied up to a full ultra-breeze & a goldenbee jacket. I've noticed several of the major catalogues are now carrying ventilated suits. A swarm is rarely defensive so all I ever wore was a veil. A friend of mine was called out to get a swarm & it looked just like a swarm but turned out it had become established & needless to say all hell broke loose. Sometimes the bees don't read the book.
 
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