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First stage of bee removal done. |
Why two sections of plywood, you may ask! Well, we're not the first to pull bees out from this floor. The bees were getting into the soffit by crawling up the mortar joints between the brick siding and then crawling through that big gap between the joists. The previous beekeeper sprayed foam insulation into the gap to keep the bees out, but the bees ate it! I guess once wood smells like wax, propolis, and brood, bees will eat just about anything to get back home.
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Broken comb sections from first section |
Once we had the bees and the mess they'd made out (it's not a mess in a hive, but I wouldn't want honey dripping onto my sheet-rock dining room ceiling), we secured the gaps with window screen. We then went outside, removed the fascia, and blocked the entrances from that direction. By that time, we could remove our suits in the room (it's a toasty 90 degrees today), and continue clean up. Hubby secured a piece of plywood over the window screen and also added some vertical blocking, just in case. The bees had been exploring and ending up in the kitchen light fixture on the other side of the house before we were called in, so if they find another way in, we want them to be confined to a small area.
As there's no way for us to eliminate the home-sweet-hive smell from the joists, hubby filled the cavity with insulation and now has the floor put back together. I came home and got the bees situated in their temporary homes, and the day was a success!
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Beautiful comb honey |
It's been a rewarding, exciting, nerve-wracking, satisfying start to the holiday weekend. We'll go back over to the house tomorrow and Monday just to make sure everything is okay and the foragers realize that their family moved and didn't leave a forwarding address!
All-in-all, I don't regret staying in the city to do this. I'll head down to the farm next weekend and see what the bees down there are up to. I'll have to come back to the city periodically as the fig tree has gone insane, but more about that later!
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