Hey, Bee experts of Tumblr
If a bumblebee makes direct contact with my knee as I'm walking and bounces off, did it tank that or did I cause some internal beeding?
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Hey, Bee experts of Tumblr
If a bumblebee makes direct contact with my knee as I'm walking and bounces off, did it tank that or did I cause some internal beeding?

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I asked my friends this question. I didn’t get any concrete answers.
I am here asking the same exact question. For science.
Possibility... please read & answer!
Hey everyone! I know that a lot of you following me are beekeepers or have had experiences with keeping bees in the past. Now, this is something that I'm starting to get quite interested in... however I'm unsure of what the requirements are. So, I have a few questions. To all my fellow bee experts, if you kindly may, please answer the questions below! My situation: - no experience keeping bees - do not intend on harvesting the honey / wax - live in an area where winters are freezing, and it's densely populated (meaning yard space, but lots of people) Questions: 1. What is the time commitment? 2. What are the skilled requirements? 3. How much human care is needed (or are the bees able to manage themselves on their own?) 4. If I do not intend on harvesting anything will there have to be human interaction with the hive? 5. How long does the colony stay in the hive? 6. With my conditions, would the hive survive? Thank you so much friends ❤️🐝
Question!
On my adventures yesterday, a little bee happened to fly by me before pollinating a flower. I wasn’t sure what type it was, however. It was about 2.5x smaller than a honeybee, and moved like a hummingbird. It had a long thin yellow body with small black strips and a long leg hanging down right after it’s head. Do any of you happen to know what type of pollinator I’m talking about?
Hey bee people- My family is new to beekeeping and today we noticed what we think is a new queen cell (seen above). We proceeded to locate the queen on another frame, so we thought this was odd. Is this actually a new queen cell and if so, what does this mean for our hive?

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I recognize that the bees dying is a huge problem, and I want to help. Which is ironic because I'm flat out terrified of flying stingy things. I have been since I learned that they nest in the goddamn GROUND and are TERRITORIAL AS FUCK. Mom was mowing paths up north once, because we have two acres up there, and leaving AMPLE space for animals to do their thing (we only put paths in one of the two acres) she got the fuck stung out of her legs, because she crossed paths with an entrance. I was terrified of bees since then. It also doesn't help that colonies of flying stinging stripey angry things build nests where they shouldn't. Such as UNDER OUR CHAIRS. It's bad enough that they live in our deck's wall mounted ornamentation, but there are trees surrounding our house. If they would just consolidate and live in there, I'd be happy. Long story short, help the bees. Also, question. Because all of the technical shit is a bit triggering for my phobia Could someone concisely and efficiently explain what the difference between bees/wasps/hornets are?