Sean
New Bee
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2024
- Messages
- 24
- Reaction score
- 16
I'm hoping someone can help. We've had honeybees take up residence in the stone wall of our house. It's been about 3 days since I noticed them. Not seen a swarm, but they've definitely fully moved in. They've found two holes about a meter apart (started with one and initially I tried to block it and then quickly studied up and unblocked it) and I assume they are in a cavity behind the stone. About 10ft above the ground. I've had a crash course in honeybees and extraction processes. It looks like a relatively small colony that has not been here long. The problem we have is that it is a grade-listed building with a 100-year-old contract between neighbors, and we can't remove stones without everyone's approval. which we do not have, and even if we did have, the reality is we could likely not afford the repair work right now due to a series of unfortunate financial events (loss of income etc.)
I've checked with house insurance (not covered) and called every registered beekeeper within a 10 mile radius on the BKA website but they all have pretty much the same answer - that a cut out is the only option. I've spoken to a few people on the bee removers database and the amounts of money being discussed are simply not an option for us right now. Which leaves us between a rock and hard place (much live our new beehive!). I'm aware that leaving the honeycomb in situ is a big nono, as it will attract other bees and pests, but that's a risk I'd be willing to take under the circumstances. It really feels like there should be a charity for this kind of work. I appreciate it's highly specialized and requires surveys, equipment, and a few different skill sets, but the country is better off when these little guys are safely rehomed. I just don't have money lying around for an ad hoc excavation on the side of my house (and yes, I've learnt my lesson - there will be no holes for them to find once this ordeal is over)!
I'm growing increasingly desperate and hoping someone can help before I do something silly that is highly unlikely to work, probably involving a shop vac and a few shots of vodka (for me, not them). Any advice much appreciated.
I've checked with house insurance (not covered) and called every registered beekeeper within a 10 mile radius on the BKA website but they all have pretty much the same answer - that a cut out is the only option. I've spoken to a few people on the bee removers database and the amounts of money being discussed are simply not an option for us right now. Which leaves us between a rock and hard place (much live our new beehive!). I'm aware that leaving the honeycomb in situ is a big nono, as it will attract other bees and pests, but that's a risk I'd be willing to take under the circumstances. It really feels like there should be a charity for this kind of work. I appreciate it's highly specialized and requires surveys, equipment, and a few different skill sets, but the country is better off when these little guys are safely rehomed. I just don't have money lying around for an ad hoc excavation on the side of my house (and yes, I've learnt my lesson - there will be no holes for them to find once this ordeal is over)!
I'm growing increasingly desperate and hoping someone can help before I do something silly that is highly unlikely to work, probably involving a shop vac and a few shots of vodka (for me, not them). Any advice much appreciated.