Please help! We’re having a fence installed, and the workers were pounding a post near the garage when a steady stream of bumble bees started coming out of the ground. It’s fantastic! I’m thrilled to know that we are hosting these amazing little creatures. However, the fence workers want us to fumigate the hive before they continue working. We will not do this. So … any ideas? We won’t have the blood of a hundred bees on our hands.
7 thoughts on “Bees!”
If you wait until this fall after a few hard freezes there won’t be any problems. The whole hive does not survive the cold, only the queen with the help of a few of her boys to keep her warm. Exact life cycle depends on the kind of bee.
So glad you want to help these bees. Bumblebees are important pollinators of native plants — and of tomatoes! — and they are in decline, faced with many of the same threats as honeybees.
StrangeDamage is right that the problem will go away by itself if you can wait. Bumblebees won’t re-use a nest. An attempt to relocate an underground nest is not likely to be successful.
It should be possible to work around the nest. Bumblebees rarely sting.
In case you are interested, the Xerces Society would like info on your bumble bee nest. They say:
Are they nice bees, or wasps? I would not hesitate to murder any number of wasps.
I wrote to the U of M’s Bee Squad about your question and got this reply:
Thanks for all the great suggestions. After a while, I think the guys realized the bees weren’t going to sting. They worked cautiously around the area and finished without any problems. Hooray!
Nice!