To protect bee populations and improve their winter survival, we are suspending bee removal for the rest of 2024. Please contact us using the form below, and we will assist once removals resume in Spring 2025.
Thank you for your understanding and commitment to protecting bees!
A swarm is a naturally occurring collection of bees, usually including a queen, that is without comb while in the process of searching for a location to form a new colony. Swarms will typically be a clumped mass of bees.
1. A Colony is a social group of honey bees that have established themselves on comb.
2. Structure - anything that is constructed or built from different interrelated parts with a fixed location on the ground. Examples of this are houses, sheds, mobile homes, & barns. For purposes of bee removals, any building that is equipped with electrical or plumbing utilities is considered to be a “structure”.
3. Non-structural colony removal - live removal of a colony of bees from locations other than a “structure”. Examples of this would be open air colonies, removals from water meters, sprinkler boxes, cable boxes, bbq pits, old tires, etc.
4. Structural colony removal - live removal of bees, colony or swarm, in which the bees are located in or on a structure as defined in (3) above.
If you are a current Beekeeper and have found that you are no longer able to care for your bees, please let us know and we will be happy to provide a new home for them!
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