Bee Disappearance information .

Halman9000

Well-Known Member
Go to Youtube and put

Vanishing of the Bees

in the youtube search engine .

Select the top result which is provided by Youtube , but there are commercials .

It is a really good and interesting movie . I am half way through watching the movie , so by the end of the movie I am hoping they have figured out all of the reasons that the vanishing Bee problem ,

Halman9000
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
Go to Youtube and put

Vanishing of the Bees

in the youtube search engine .

Select the top result which is provided by Youtube , but there are commercials .

It is a really good and interesting movie . I am half way through watching the movie , so by the end of the movie I am hoping they have figured out all of the reasons that the vanishing Bee problem ,

Halman9000
Man and disregard for the environment is the reason for the vanishing bees.
 

xtsho

Well-Known Member
So I was out in the back of the yard today and came across a beautiful sight.

A Bombus Melanopygus or Black tailed Bumble Bee nest in a birdhouse. I have a ton of bees of all sorts in my garden. I refuse to use anything that is harmful to bees in my yard and the result is a safe haven for them. They like it here. Lots of food for them. I've been researching these bees and I'm going to do everything I can to make accommodations for a queen or two to want to stay around and nest again next year.

Just doing my small part to help the bees. When the bees go so does our food supply. I don't think most people realize how necessary bee's really are. I find it mind boggling that people are so naive that they continue to spray poison that kills bees in order to get rid of a few other pests.


I have some of the mud you use for Mason bees and I put some on a couple rocks next to the birdhouse thinking they would use it for building nests to lay eggs. I then realized they were not Mason bees and don't use mud. I have a bunch of tubes for mason bees but they've never used them. I think I'll move them to a different part of the yard and see if I can't get some to use them.


 

bam0813

Well-Known Member
I have a friend with a bee yard I often visit. Been learning about them for a couple years contemplating starting some hives but it's the one more thing thing stopping me only right now. Not much about bees particularly honey bees that doesn't amaze me
 

bam0813

Well-Known Member
How much would you give to try some of that hallucinatory honey. I could never make the journey to get it though. A guy can dream
 

bam0813

Well-Known Member
You must be referring to the Nepalese honey.
Yes indeed. Quite the journey the villagers make for it. I've never been afraid of heights,work at height fairly regularly but something tells me if I was hanging off a cliff on homemade rope and rope ladders I would be lol
 

bam0813

Well-Known Member
Never really been into hallucinating either but the adventure and the fact its honey and bees is awesome to me.
 

Mr. Bakerton

Well-Known Member
I am fortunate to have a large area of intact forest right next to my garden. My garden is swarming with bumble bees. When the plums are in bloom you can hear the buzz from 30 feet away. I so much enjoy walking right into the middle of it and being a part of it all.

my garden and growing space is fairly wild. I have mistaklingly dug up bumble bee nests. My point, we focus so much on flowers for them but no one is saying anything about making sure they have a place to sleep. Undisturbed wild areas help foster the bees other needs.
 

Token Dankies

Well-Known Member
I have flowers all over for the bees and bird baths to make sure everyone has some water. What I noticed this year is that I don't have as many bees as last year and am not sure if it is because of the weather or what. I don't spray any chemicals on my yard and I let my weeds grow out fully and get the grass all funky but I rather feed nature than vanity.

Still hoping I get my bee friends back!
 

Nutty sKunK

Well-Known Member
The Bee decline can be linked with the increase in microwaves. Not microwave ovens but cellular networks use microwaves.

Bees use the magnetic field to navigate and some frequencies (whether phone related or not) are most definitely interfering with them.

Maybe it’s messing with our younger generation as they are fucked. Emails flying through your head n shit
 

Star Dog

Well-Known Member
A tree bumble bee, it's a new arrival relatively speaking.
_20190602_103031.JPG

Bees are extremely fascinating creatures.

Bees cooking the invading hornet.
 
Last edited:
Top