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Author Topic: bees in tree  (Read 4416 times)

Offline JP

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bees in tree
« on: July 18, 2007, 10:03:09 pm »
Hey guys, a lady has bees in her tree. The cavity starts at ground level and extends up into the tree, I am guessing 2 & 1/2 to 3', cause I can see bees on both sides of the cavity and some extending down from where I believe is the top ceiling of the cavity. The bees have been in the tree since last Thursday, July 12th. I think this to be fairly if not completely accurate since she has to pass the tree to enter the front door. We don't have much of a nectar flow right now, so I doubt there is much comb. The opening is not large enough to put my hand into and I don't want to use the bee-vac. I have used fischer's bee-quick before and was thinking of using it in this instance, to run the bees out and into a deep with some brood frames. I do lots of removals but not many on trees. My main question is whether the queen would leave and enter the deep with the rest of the bees. I haven't tried this before so I am looking for the best option. I haven't performed trapping before and in fact I e-mailed Iddee from Beesource and that's what he said he would do, (trap them out)but I think the bee-quick would work but I know queens can be difficult to leave once they have gotten established. I would like some feed back, especially from those who may have been here before. Thnks, Jp.
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Offline wayne

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Re: bees in tree
« Reply #1 on: July 19, 2007, 08:04:58 pm »
  If they have only been there a few days, you can push them back out with moth crystals or some other strong fume. The cavity isn't home yet so they will leave.
  Just set the hive on a stool or what ever to get it level with the entrance. Hit it good with lemon grass oil and add a couple frames of comb for bait. Make sure they have an easy entrance to the box.
  Put the crystals in a bag and push as far back as possible so they can get past it and out. 
I was born about 100 years too early, or to late.

jfischer

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Re: bees in tree
« Reply #2 on: July 20, 2007, 11:22:27 am »
With trees, soak a cloth with Bee-Quick, and rubber-band it over the business end of the hose
of a shop-vac.  Plug the hose into the exhaust port of the shop vac.  Now you have
a high-powered fume deployment system.

Use a hole saw to cut a hole opposite the entrance, at the far top or bottom "rear" of
the hive cavity (it may take several test drillings with a small drill bit to verify the
extent of the hive), insert the end of the hose, and turn on the shop-vac.

Works for me...

Offline JP

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Re: bees in tree
« Reply #3 on: July 20, 2007, 04:30:30 pm »
And You have had experience with the queen leaving as well, Jim?
My Youtube page is titled JPthebeeman with hundreds of educational & entertaining videos.

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