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- Jan 18, 2021
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This concerns a colony of my least localised bees....they come from a breeder who is fifteen miles away.
For that reason I consider them to be wimps and it's not unusual for them to be short of breath after a long shift on a cold day. Then, they literally chill-out in small clumps close to the hive; sad to see them huddled up and dead the next morning. But this lot were different and it wasn't that cold. Looking more closely, there seemed to be some co-ordinated activity. The weirdest thing was the grass they were on; all the strands were newly cut off as they weren't wilted. The grass was different than the coarse meadowgrass in the field outside the fence, and it doesn't match with anything around the hives. I picked up most of the bees and placed them, with the grass, on the entrance step; they eventually returned home. The rest of the colony was functioning as normal, with lots of incoming nectar and pollen; they were inspected last Friday and all was well.
It's seemed as if the bees had somehow brought the grass strands to the hive, or had at least arranged them some way; at any rate, there was something about the grass that was animating them. Can anyone be bothered to suggest what I might have been seeing please?
For that reason I consider them to be wimps and it's not unusual for them to be short of breath after a long shift on a cold day. Then, they literally chill-out in small clumps close to the hive; sad to see them huddled up and dead the next morning. But this lot were different and it wasn't that cold. Looking more closely, there seemed to be some co-ordinated activity. The weirdest thing was the grass they were on; all the strands were newly cut off as they weren't wilted. The grass was different than the coarse meadowgrass in the field outside the fence, and it doesn't match with anything around the hives. I picked up most of the bees and placed them, with the grass, on the entrance step; they eventually returned home. The rest of the colony was functioning as normal, with lots of incoming nectar and pollen; they were inspected last Friday and all was well.
It's seemed as if the bees had somehow brought the grass strands to the hive, or had at least arranged them some way; at any rate, there was something about the grass that was animating them. Can anyone be bothered to suggest what I might have been seeing please?