The Bee Guy Profile picture
May 26 14 tweets 6 min read Read on X
We’ve had a number of enquiries lately from people worried about having a bumblebee ‘hive’ in their garden.
‘Are they dangerous?’
‘Should I have them removed?’
‘Will they be there forever?’
Here’s a quick bumblebee lifecycle thread to explain.
Please #retweet for the #bees.
1/14
Spoiler alert:
Bumblebee nests generally exist for a matter of months.
Maximum number of #bees run to hundreds not thousands.
They don’t swarm.
They are not aggressive.
They don’t need to be - and shouldn’t be - moved.
You’re lucky to have them - enjoy and celebrate them!
2/14
The Bumblebee Lifecyle.
This is the quick version and a generalisation - obviously there may be variance depending on species and geographic location.

#Bumblebee queens emerge from hibernation in early spring - how they got there we’ll get to later just go with it for now!
3/14
These queens feed up (they’re famished) search for a suitable nest location - dry and cosy (but not too cosy) - and established their nest. They lay a few eggs and sit on them to keep them at the ideal temperature until they hatch. This first batch of eggs will be female…
4/14
…workers. These workers will then help the queen (now nest bound) to raise subsequent broods. They’ll forage, nurse and perform other nest duties.
Later in the summer the queen will produce male offspring from unfertilised eggs. These males will disperse in search of a…
5/14
…mate. Most will be unsuccessful in the mating game.
The queen will also produce the next generation of queens late in the summer.
Shortly after this the nest will come to a natural end. The queen dies. The males die as indeed do the female workers. (Males and female…
6/14
…workers live for only a matter of weeks.
The new queens are the only #bumblebees to live through the winter (queens live for about a year) and will feed up, disperse to ensure genetic diversity, and seek a suitable north-facing location to hibernate in until springtime…
7/14
…when they’ll emerge (remember earlier - that’s where these emerging queens come from) and start the whole beautiful process all over again.

So a couple of take aways for you in your garden:

The nest will be gone by late Autumn.
The nest will be home to at most a…
8/14
…couple of hundred #bees at it’s peak and as few as fifty.
Likely nesting sites: in long grass, under or in your shed/porch, in your compost heap, in old rodent holes, in bird boxes, hollows in trees and dry stone walls to name but a few - #bumblebees are opportunistic…
9/14
…when it comes to nesting.
They are not aggressive and not interested in you.
They will not sting (preferring flight over fight) unless you persistently threaten them or accidentally stand on one or squash one.
They do not swarm - you will notice much coming and…
10/14
…going from the nest entrance as the female workers busily and relentlessly leave and return from foraging trips (something that is a joy to observe).
You will also notice males sleeping on your (chemical free) #flowers as once they are mature they leave the nest never…
11/14
…return.
And your flowers and garden are of course now chemical free because you love these bees and understand that chemicals in your garden mess them up big time.
The nest (not a hive!) does not need to be moved and shouldn’t be. It should never NEVER ever be destroyed!
12/14
You’re lucky if you have a #bumblebee nest in your garden/yard.
It is a privilege to be able to provide a space for these wonderful, vital and often endangered creatures.
If they choose your patch it’s your responsibility to choose to protect/watch out for these #bees.
13/14
Enjoy them.
Celebrate them.
(They’ll be gone by winter and you’ll miss them!)

Like eating apples?
You need bees!

Please #retweet/#share for the bees.

The more people learn about #bees the better chance they have of thriving.

Thanks folks.

Go easy in your gardens.
🙏🏼🐝
14/14

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More from @the_beeguy

May 18
Please #retweet/#share for the #bees.🙏🏼🐝

Again let’s talk about #honeybees in the context of ‘Saving the Bees’.
Let’s cut the bull and cut to the chase as there’s way too much confusion/misinformation out there which is a hinderance to & detrimental to genuine bee saving.
1/18
May 20th has been designated World Bee Day by the UN. This date is the birthday of the pioneer of modern beekeeping – Anton Janša.
But maybe in reality it should be World Honey Bee Day & #bumblebees/#solitarybees should get their own day.
‘ENDANGERED BEE DAY’
Why?
Read on.
2/18
Context:
There are 3 basic types of bee on the planet.
#Solitarybees.
#Bumblebees.
#Honeybees.
Of the 20,000+ species of bee only 8 are honey #bees.
Around 40% of bee species are under pressure worldwide.
Honey bees are not in trouble.
Repeat.
Honey bees are not in trouble.
3/18
Read 18 tweets
Apr 20
You knew #bumblebees were friendly but…is that bumblebee actually waving at you?

Please #retweet/#share for the #bees.

When talking to people about bumblebees (which we do a lot!😊) they tend to mistakenly associate them with two things; honey and stings.

Here’s a thread on #stings to set the record straight.
We’ll get to honey another day.

Thanks, as always, good people. 🙏🏼🐝

1/12
Spoiler alert!
Quick version.
It’s not a wave it’s a warning.
One leg up - back off.
2 legs up - seriously back off!
Belly up - wtf dude get the message!
#Bumblebees only sting as a last resort.
Can sting more than once.
Don’t die when they sting.
Males can’t sting!
2/12
#Bumblebees have the capability to sting for sure but being the docile gentle creatures they are they don’t like to use this capability - it’s their nuclear option! The ability to sting is a defence mechanism to defend their nest and themselves if they are being…
3/12
#bees
Read 12 tweets
Apr 7
Sunday Morning with the Queen.

So you’re a queen.
Bee that is.
Bumblebee if you don’t mind.
And you’ve had your furry buff little arse buffeted and soaked by wind and rain since you emerged from hibernation.
Spring they say?
Not around these parts.
Not this year.
You need…
1/4
…a moment.
Somewhere dry and wind free.
To get your shit together.
Yes #bumblebees need those moments too!
And just inside the open door of a polytunnel is the ideal place.
To get off those wings and stretch those legs.
To pause from the constant, relentless search for…
2/4
…flowers (is it just me or are they getting scarcer and scarcer?) and the non-stop house hunting.
And that’s before you even think about egg laying, brooding and keeping all the eventual kids in order.
Yes, sometimes you just need a moment.
To have a good scratch.
A good..
3/4
Read 4 tweets
Apr 6
Queen #BUMBLEBEES - HELP THEM OUT!
Another Spring Saturday morning with @the_beeguy (follow him - he’s good, possibly even the best! 😊) means another vital thread concerning #bumblebee queens at this time of year!
Please #retweet/#share as EVERY QUEEN BEE THAT SURVIVES GETS TO ESTABLISH A NEST that otherwise would not happen. This has knock on effects going forward. Let me explain.
1/11
#bees
#Bumblebees don’t understand glass - they get confused and trapped and exhausted.
And they die.
Likewise with polytunnel plastic.
So if you see or hear a bumblebee buzzing and banging against a window in your house SHE NEEDS YOUR HELP - AND QUICKLY!
She’s in trouble.
2/11
So you need to act fast - don’t leave her suffer while you do something else (with good intentions to get to her at some stage - which you might forget).
Why?
#Bumblebees, even with a full stomach, have about 40 minutes of ‘energy’ in them before…
3/11
Read 11 tweets
Mar 30
As always, many people asking us about #bumblebees at the moment - WHY THEY’RE SEEING THEM ON THE GROUND - so here’s a thread to explain what they’re up to.
Please #retweet.
Every #queen that survives means a new colony that gets to exist & produce new queen #bees for next year!
1/9
Spoiler Alert!
Quick version:
Queens just out of hibernation.
Hungry and house-hunting.
Rest often between flights.
Don’t move or help for an hour unless in immediate danger!
Flowers best option.
50/50 white sugar/water next best option - NOT HONEY!
Don’t bring her inside.
2/9
#Bumblebee queens emerge in early spring from #hibernation and immediately need to feed - that’s why early flowering plants are so important. Apart from feeding their mission at this time is to find a suitable site to establish a nest. Hence you will observe queens flying low 3/9
Read 9 tweets
Nov 19, 2023
It’s winter. The buzzing has stopped - mostly.
So what’s happened to all the #bees?
You’ve been asking…so a quick thread to broadly account for our little friends at this time of year.
Please #retweet and #share.
You know the drill.
The more informed the better for bees. 1/12
And they do need better from us!

Spoiler alert!
Bumbles - new queens in hibernation.
Solitaries - kids in cocoons.
Honeys - small ball of hot hive-bound bees.

So let’s start with honey #bees and get them out of the way as you know they’re not really our thing here.
2/12
#Honeybees don’t hibernate. They reduce the colony numbers but stay active within the hive.
As temperatures drop (below 50ºF) they form a cluster (ball of bees) in the hive in order to use body heat primarily to keep the queen alive. This cluster will have a densely…
3/12
Read 12 tweets

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