Safely Remove Honey Bees from Your Home
November 25th, 2010
A large honey bee colony will sometimes divide itself, and a swarm may leave the hive. The new swarm will send out scout bees to search for a suitable place to build a new home. Usually scout bees will find a hollow tree, but sometimes they will find an opening in your home’s outside walls or foundation. Bees may nest in the walls, ceiling, basement or attic; often some distance from where they entered the house.
If you suspect you may have a colony of honey bees in your house, try to observe and note the opening in your outside walls being used by the bees. Look near the foundation line of your home, under your deck, in your attic rafters, any other areas that may provide a way for honey bees to get into your home.
Removing honey bees from inside any of the above spaces is a time consuming process that is best to have done by professionals. You can do it yourself, but only if you know what you are doing and use extreme caution.
It is important that all honeycomb and its contents be removed. Bits of wax left behind give off highly attractive odors that will attract other bees looking for a new home. If the nest is not removed, the wax cells may melt and seep through interior walls and ceilings, leaving permanent stains.
Contact us or give us a call and we’ll promptly be at your property with the industry’s leading products and methodologies to neutralize any threat that the bees may pose.
A large honey bee colony will sometimes divide itself, and a swarm may leave the hive. The new swarm will send out scout bees to search for a suitable place to build a new home. Usually scout bees will find a hollow tree, but sometimes they will find an opening in your home’s outside walls or foundation. Bees may nest in the walls, ceiling, basement or attic; often some distance from where they entered the house.
If you suspect you may have a colony of honey bees in your house, try to observe and note the opening in your outside walls being used by the bees. Look near the foundation line of your home, under your deck, in your attic rafters, any other areas that may provide a way for honey bees to get into your home.
Removing honey bees from inside any of the above spaces is a time consuming process that is best to have done by professionals. You can do it yourself, but only if you know what you are doing and use extreme caution.
It is important that all honeycomb and its contents be removed. Bits of wax left behind give off highly attractive odors that will attract other bees looking for a new home. If the nest is not removed, the wax cells may melt and seep through interior walls and ceilings, leaving permanent stains.
Contact us or give us a call and we’ll promptly be at your property with the industry’s leading products and methodologies to neutralize any threat that the bees may pose.
