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Where Honey Bees Build Their Hives

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Most Common Spots Honey Bees Build their Nests

Eaves/ Soffits
 
Bee Removal Soffit.jpgThe eaves or soffits of a house are a favorite spot for the honey bee. They tend to choose East or Southeast facing locations and prefer the protection provided by the eave since they are usually isolated from the house and the attic. Bees only need an 1/8 of an inch to get into a cavity. Once they start building their hive, they will continue to fill the cavity until it is full and then move over to the Bee Hive soffit.jpg
next accessible cavity or worse, the roof line which then requires a roofer to do the repairs after the bee hive is removed.
 
 
 
 
Trees
 
Bees_In_a_tree.jpgThe hallow of trees is another of the Honey Bee's preferred locations. We often get call from customers saying "I just walked by the tree in my front yard and it sound like there's a engine running in my tree", or "my tree is humming." Usually if you see a clump of honey bees hanging off a branch, this is a swarm trying to find a new home and resting while the scouts identify suitable locations (though they will sometimes build right off a branch). To kill bees within the hallow of a tree can be a difficult task because it is impossible to see which way the cavity goes and whether or not the pesticide you are applying is reaching the majority of the hive. Additionally, you have to be aware of other entrances to the hallow that might be further up the tree out of sight. How to kill bees inside a tree? You have you cut of their resources!!! If they can't gather pollen, nectar and water, they cannot survive!!! 
 

Cinder Blocks
 
Honey_Bees_Cinder_block.jpgAnother location that we often find Bee Hives is in the Cinder Blocks. Bee Hive removal can be difficult to deal with in these spots because of the way Cinder blocks are constructed overlapping, resulting in the bee hive zig zagging through the caverns of the cinder block. To assure complete bee hive removal requires a four point inspection of each block that activity is discovered in.
 
 
 Behind Siding
 
bees_in_siding.jpgBehind the siding between it and the drywall is another location we constantly have to do bee hivebees_in_siding2.jpg removal from. We have seen honey bees fill the cavity from ceiling to ground, from stud to stub. As with the eaves, they prefer east and southeast facing walls and also enjoy the isolation being in between the exterior and interior walls. We often get calls from customers that their walls have started to buzzzz...usually by the time you can hear it from the inside, there is a substantial and well developed hive already established inside the wall. bees_in_siding2.jpg 
 

Behind Bricks
 
 Most brick structures have spaces in between the bricks, usually at the base, where no grout was applied tobees_in_brick2.jpg allow ventilation. The honey bee will enter through the slit and begin building their honeycomb in the hollow behind the brick. If there are vertical studs along the cavity, the bee will fill a cavity and then move over the stud to the next hollow. Once they start building, removing the brick to expose the honeycomb is necessary so it can be properly removed. To avoid destroying any of the bricks during the bee removal process, experience and precision are required to cut out the grout without compromising the bricks since they can be re-used to close the cavity after all the honey comb has been extracted. Click here for more pics 
 Bees_in_brick.jpg
 Under Sheds
 
Another favorite home for the honey bee is under the floor of sheds. This usually provides a cool dark spacebees_shed_floor.jpgwebassets/bees_shed_floor.jpg for them to build honey_bees_under_shed.jpgtheir home. Since the shed is visited occasionally to grab some tools or pull out the lawnmower, it's not uncommon for hives to be there for many months before identified.   
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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