38 points

Honeybees moved into my backyard recently. I guess they somehow attract a lot of different wildlife in some mysterious way, because we now have cardinals, blue jays, possums, chipmunks, and marble lizards living back there too.

For context, I live in Ridgewood Queens, so this feels absolutely insane. Loving every second of it but god damn

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8 points

You just became a Disney princess.

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7 points

I’M A BEAUTIFUL BUTTERFLY

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2 points

But can you paint with all the colors of the wind?

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4 points
*

I’ve found that it’s bringing the bugs back in general that causes this wave. Perhaps you or someone near you has planted some new stuff, or let some stuff grow wild. Like someone stopped mowing, and suddenly the bugs have a place to live and explode.

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33 points

Note: honeybees are not a native species in the US

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12 points

Is this true? I never knew this. Is there another primary insect in the US that’s a pollinator?

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13 points

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kf2-86o5S1o here’s a video about it.

The US has countless pollinators.

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2 points

Thank you!

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6 points

it is also not easy to replace them in agriculture. Many wild bees (like mason bees) are incredible better pollinators than honey bees, but most of them are solitary (making them grow in large numbers almost impossible) or pollinate only specific types of plants.

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3 points

Other bees - who they can outcompete and kill

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28 points

I used to have several hives in Texas until moving out East. The heat and droughts were brutal for them. We were constantly trying to split healthy hives to increase success for our queens.

This coming spring I’ll try to add two hives to our backyard as the city allows for up to 3 hives per residence. I’m hoping the more temperate climate and docile queens will help our area.

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2 points

How much work per month do you find them?

I’d love bees on our property but I don’t have the time to do lots of maintenance.

On that note I wonder if I can pay a keeper to colocate a colony on my property…

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2 points

@darknavi@vlemmy.net Surprisingly, there is not that much maintenance on beehives. They are incredibly efficient and sufficient on their own. When I add my two hive boxes next spring, I’ll be present enough at home to periodically check hive activity and do minor hive body inspections.

The most active you’ll be in the care of the hives is during winter (your climate may vary). In colder months when flowers don’t bloom, we cook sugar water to have for hive feeders so they are well fed. Outside of that, let nature take its course. It’s very rewarding and fun to provide a means for you and your neighbors to have pollinators and local honey.

There are plenty of “starter kits” or “garden kits” that allow for ease of entry into beekeeping.

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15 points

A friend of mine moved to Texas and became a beekeeper. Doing what they can!

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10 points

Taking the hard path!

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12 points

The USA can take this large losses, they have relative few hives and can easily import bees if needed.

IIRC there are 2 million hives in the USA with 100 Million managed hives world wide. A lot of the 2 million hives in the USA are managed by big commercial beekeepers (1000+ hives) and I doubt a lot of them take the survey. While I’ve heard about higher winter losses from commercial beekeepers I doubt they are this high.

I work with/for a european commercial beekeeper and we had low winter losses ~3%. While the hobby beekepers had a record high loss according to the national survey ~30%.

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Isn’t the high death rate an indicator of problems with the general insect population? While bees are important pollinators, so are wasps, flys, butterflys and many more, that cannot rely on active measures to recover.

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