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         Bees:     more books (100)
  1. Geography Bee Demystified by Ram Iyer, 2008-02-09
  2. Zee Bees by Robert Osmon, 2007-09-01
  3. The Biology of the Honey Bee by Mark L. Winston, 1991-04-01
  4. Queen Bees and Wannabes by Rosalind Wiseman, 2002-04-30
  5. Keeping Bees by John Vivian, 1986-01
  6. American Bee: The National Spelling Bee and the Culture of Word Nerds by James Maguire, 2006-05-01
  7. Time For Kids: Bees! (Time For Kids) by Editors Of Time For Kids, 2005-08-01
  8. The Bees of the World by Charles D. Michener, 2007-05-04
  9. Letters from the Hive: An Intimate History of Bees, Honey, and Humankind by Stephen Buchmann, Banning Repplier, 2006-05-30
  10. The Burt's Bees Facial Kit (Mega Mini) by Pamela Liflander, 2003-03
  11. Bee Movie: The Junior Novel (Bee Movie) by Susan Korman, 2007-09-01
  12. Why I'm Afraid Of Bees (Goosebumps Series) by R L Stine, 2005-04-01
  13. Mean Girls Grown Up: Adult Women Who Are Still Queen Bees, Middle Bees, and Afraid-to-Bees by Cheryl, PhD Dellasega, 2007-10-05
  14. Bug Collection Bible: New International Version, Bumble Bee Italian Duo-tone (Bug Collection Bible Series)

61. Bees And Pollination
bees and Pollination. OARDC logo. Selected web resources about honeybees, beekeeping, and pollination by bees.
http://www.oardc.ohio-state.edu/agnic/bee/
Bees and Pollination
Selected web resources about honeybees, beekeeping, and pollination by bees.
Miscellaneous Contacts Subject Areas Electronic Publications Links from AgNIC to trade, firm, or corporation sites are for the information and convenience of users of AgNIC. Such use does not constitute an official endorsement or approval by institutions and organizations participating in the AgNIC Alliance of any product or service to the exclusion of others that may be suitable. This web site is maintained by The Ohio State University's Ohio Agricultural Research and Development Center in cooperation with AgNIC. Comments and suggestions may be directed to Connie Britton, Librarian, OARDC at britton.4@osu.edu Last modified: 7/14/00

62. Honey Bee Swarms And Bees In Walls
Includes information on the value of bees, dealing with swarming activity, and options for dealing with colonies in walls.
http://www.ces.uga.edu/pubcd/c824-w.html

Cooperative Extension Service
Honey Bee Swarms and Bees in Walls
Keith S. Delaplane, Extension Entomologist This circular is for property owners who have unwanted honey bee swarms on their lands or colonies nesting inside walls. It explains these natural processes and gives options for dealing with them.
The Value of Honey Bees
Honey bees are one of the most beneficial of all insects. Honey is humanity's oldest sweet, and beeswax was the first plastic. Today, honey bees provide these and other valuable hive products. In addition, thousands of beekeepers in the United States keep bees for fun and profit. Honey bees are important pollinators of almonds, apples, blackberries, blueberries, cantaloupes, cranberries, cucumbers, forage crops, kiwifruit, squash and watermelons. The annual contribution of honey bees to U.S. food production is more than $9 million.
What Is a Honey Bee Swarm?
Honey bee colonies reproduce by a process called swarming. During mid-winter, the queen begins laying eggs and the colony population grows. By spring, the nest is congested with many new bees. The colony raises a new queen and the old queen flies away accompanied by more than half the bees. This flying swarm temporarily clusters on an object, such as a tree branch, while scout bees search for a permanent nest site. A hanging swarm may assume any shape, depending on the surface on which it is clustered. Most hanging swarms are round or oval, about the size of a basketball, and dark brown.

63. Insecta Inspecta World - Killer Bees
Africanized, Sometimes Called Killer bees . Click Here to See a Movie on the Killer Bee. In WHAT CAUSES KILLER bees TO ATTACK? Africanized
http://www.insecta-inspecta.com/bees/killer/

Home
Ants
Bees

Beetles
...
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Africanized, Sometimes Called "Killer Bees"
Click Here to See a Movie on the Killer Bee In the movie The Swarm, great clouds of angry bees attack entire cities and sting hundreds of people to death. This is pure fiction. It could never happen. But folklore like this has arisen within the last ten years regarding the Africanized sometimes called "Killer Bee". The ancestors of the Africanized bee live throughout Africa, south of the Sahara Desert. African bees were accidentally introduced into the wild in South and North America during 1956. Brazilian scientists were attempting to create a new hybrid bee in the hopes of creating improved honey production. The Africanized bee escaped and began to dominate honey bee. The new hybrid, called an Africanized Bee, took many years established colonies throughout South and Central America. The bee is aggressive, easily agitated, and generally a bee with a bad attitude. The first Africanized bee was found in the United States in October 1990, in a southern area of Texas. The Africanized bee is expected to spread across the southern part of the country, where the winters aren't so harsh. Some scientists and entomologists believe that the Africanized bees will be able to adapt to colder weather and roam as far north as Montana. If this projection is true, it could become a big problem for a number fo reasons in the United States.
TAXONOMY
    Class: Insecta
    Order: Hymenoptra "Membrane Winged" (Wasps, Ants)

64. Keeping Bees
Smalltime Idaho beekeeper presents a wealth of information on bees; written to be very accessible to non-beekeepers.
http://www.hotcity.com/~mwr/bees.html

65. Insecta Inspecta World - Honey Bees
Honey bees. Buzz! What a busy honey bee! Honey bees make and do things that are helpful to humans. They are very interesting insects.
http://www.insecta-inspecta.com/bees/honey/

Home
Ants
Bees

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Honey Bees
How doth the little busy bee
Improve each shining hour,
And gather honey all the day
From every opening flower!
By: Isaac Watts, "Against Idleness and Mischief"
Buzz! What a busy honey bee! Honey bees make and do things that are helpful to humans. They are very interesting insects. Honey bees provide us with honey, royal jelly, beeswax,and propolis. They are very cooperative insects and have good colony structure. They are the prime pollinators of the planet. Honey bees are social insects. A typical hive is divided primarily into worker bees and drones, ruled by the queen. Now let’s go find out the wonderful things that bees do that help us!
HONEY
Honey bees have to go through a long process to make honey. The house bee and the field bee are involved in the process. First the field bee goes out and collects nectar, which it stores in an internal honey sac. They bring it back to the hive and transfer it to the house bee tongue to tongue. Then the house bee spreads a drop of nectar on the roof of a cell in a comb. During the next couple of days other house bees fan their wings over the nectar so that the moisture evaporates (nectar is 80% water and honey is 19% water). Finally, more house bees cover every cell filled with modified nectar with a thin layer of wax. Honey is a product that honey bees make. Humans use the honey for many different purposes. Honey can be a substitute for sugar in many foods. You can make ice cream with honey but you would have to lower the temperature in the freezer because honey lowers the freezing point. Honey has a greater sweetening ability that sugar doesn’t have. One cup of honey weighs twelve ounces while one cup of sugar weighs seven ounces.

66. St. Bees Cumbria
Traveler's guide to Cumbria and the Lake District. Includes business and accommodation listings, and tourist attractions.
http://www.thecumbriadirectory.com/Town_or_Village/St._Bees/St._Bees.php
Choose a Business or Profession
Builders Caravan Parks-Holiday Driving Schools Garage Services Guest Houses Libraries Post Offices Public Houses Restaurants Self Catering
Select a Town or Village Abbeytown Ackenthwaite Aikton Ainstable Aldingham Allithwaite Allonby Alston Ambleside Anthorn Appleby-in-Westmoreland Applethwaite Arlecdon Armathwaite Arnside Asby Askam in Furness Askham Aspatria Bampton Bampton Grange Barbon Bardsea Barrow-In-Furness Barrows Green Bassenthwaite Beaumont Beckermet Beetham Bewaldeth Bewcastle Bigrigg Blackford Blawith Blencow Boltongate Boot Bootle Bouth Bowness-on-Windermere Braithwaite Brampton Bridekirk Brigham Brigsteer Brockleymoor Bromfield Brough Broughton in Furness Broughton Mills Burgh by Sands Burneside Burton-in-Kendal Buttermere Caldbeck Calder Bridge Cark (Cartmel) Carlisle Cartmel Casterton Castle Carrock Chapel Stile Cleator Cleator Moor Clifton Cockermouth Colton Coniston Crook Crooklands Crosby Garrett Crosby Ravensworth Crosby-on-Eden Crosthwaite Dacre Dalston Dalton-in-Furness Dent Dockray Dufton Eamont Bridge Egremont Elterwater Embleton Endmoor Eskdale Green Far Arnside Far Sawrey Field Broughton Flookburgh Frizington Gamblesby Garrigill Glenridding Gosforth Grange Grange-Over-Sands Grasmere Great Crosthwaite Great Musgrave Great Strickland Great Urswick Greystoke Grinsdale Harrington Hartley Hartsop Haverigg Haverthwaite Hawkshead Hayton (Aspatria) Helton Hesket Newmarket High Hesket Hutton Roof (Kirkby Lonsdale) Hutton Roof (Penrith) Ireby Kearstwick Kendal Kentmere Keswick Killington Kirkby Lonsdale Kirkby Stephen Kirkby Thore Kirkoswald Lazonby Levens Lindal in Furness

67. Attack Of The "Killer Bees" - Africanized Honey Bees (DesertUSA)
Africanized bees acquired the name killer bees because they will viciously attack people and animals who unwittingly stray into their territory, often
http://www.desertusa.com/mag98/sep/stories/kbees.html
Attack of the "Killer Bees " B
Africanized Honey Bees (AHB) also called "Africanized bees" or "killer bees" are descendants of southern African bees imported in 1956 by Brazilian scientists attempting to breed a honey bee better adapted to the South American tropics. When some of these bees escaped quarantine in 1957, they began breeding with local Brazilian honey bees, quickly multiplying and extended their range throughout South and Central America at a rate greater than 200 miles per year. In the past decade, AHB began invading North America. Africanized bees acquired the name "killer bees" because they will viciously attack people and animals who unwittingly stray into their territory, often resulting in serious injury or death. It is not necessary to disturb the hive itself to initiate an AHB attack. In fact, Africanized bees have been know to respond viciously to mundane occurrences, including noises or even vibrations from vehicles, equipment and pedestrians. Though their venom is no more potent than native honey bees, Africanized bees attack in far greater numbers and pursue perceived enemies for greater distances. Once disturbed, colonies may remain agitated for 24 hours, attacking people and animals within a range of a quarter mile from the hive.

68. Untitled Document
Unofficial site, containing the news and results from Bracknell bees, along with a forum, editorial comments and games
http://homepage.ntlworld.com/buzzbee/
CLOSED!
Your webmaster, Buzz Bee, is sorry to announce that after 8 great years producing 'Sting' and its predecessor, 'The Buzz Box' this site is now closed. Running a site such as this has become very demanding. To keep up to date takes an awful lot of time and, as sites become increasingly informative, the time necessary to keep 'Sting' up to date has become greater and greater. Unlike other comparable sites, 'Sting' remained the work of one man and one man only and, without a supporting team of webmasters, it is no longer particle to continue with the site. The only way to keep up these days, without spending endless hours doing so, is to purchase software that automates everything for you. Unfortunately, this costs money that I simply do not have. I hope that 'Sting' has brought you a lot of enjoyment over the years. I for one will be very sad to see it gone. If you require any further information, I can still be contacted at webmaster.sting@ntlworld.com

69. The Official Site Of The King Bees
The site of this BluesRock formation offers a band biography, discography, reviews and album information.
http://kingbees.home.mindspring.com/
Catch a Blues Buzz with...
The King Bees
These international recording artists have rocked their blues from Mississippi juke joints to New York City's Lincoln Center to European festival stages. CHECK OUT THEIR LATEST CD ON TRAMP RECORDS, AMSTERDAM,
FROM THE CHICAGO-STYLE SHUFFLE OF "Where'd You Get To" TO THE SMOKY DELTA-STYLED "Send Me To The Jailhouse" TO THE ROCKIN' "Coupe de Ville" IT OFFERS UP THE BEST OF BLUES TRADITIONS WHILE SOUNDING FRESH AND ORIGINAL.
* Band Biography
* Discography and TV appearances * CD information, reviews and how to order * Quotes from the press ...
LIVING SOUTHERN BLUES!!! Roster of other artists

Contact us - kingbees@webtv.net
MellowDown Productions
P.O. Box 200
Todd, NC 28684 USA
Phone: (336) 877-2864, Fax: (336) 877-2865
This Official Blues Ring site is owned by Rob Baskerville SkipPrev Prev Next ... ListSites
Webmaster - Dale Hughes - dale.hughes@mindspring.com

70. Bees At EnchantedLearning.com
Click here.). EnchantedLearning.com bees at Enchanted Learning Rhyme, online coloring pages, printouts, and quizzes, Click Here for More K3 Themes. Bee Rhymes
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/themes/bees.shtml
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Bees at Enchanted Learning
Rhyme, online coloring pages, printouts, and quizzes Click Here for
More K-3 Themes

Bee Rhymes
Bees
The Fly has Married the Bumblebee
Over in the Meadow Bee Printouts to Color
Bee Bees are flying, social insects that live in a hive. Bee (Simple version) Bees are flying, social insects that live in a hive. Color A Bee Online Bee Color this bee any way you'd like. Bee Quizzes Bee Find it! Quiz Answer questions about bees using the Little Explorers picture dictionary . (printable) Bee Anatomy and Life Cycle: CLOZE ACTIVITY A fill-in-the-blank activity on bees. (printable) Click Here for More K-3 Themes Apples Alligators, Crocodiles Alphabet, Letters ... Enchanted Learning Click to read Overview of Site What's New Enchanted Learning Home Monthly Activity Calendars Site map K-3 Beginning Books Crafts K-3 Themes Little Explorers Picture dictionary PreK/K Activities Rebus Rhymes Writing Cloze Activities Essay Topics Writing Activities Fiction The Test of Time Biology Animal Printouts Biology Label Printouts Biomes Birds ... Whales Physical Science Astronomy The Earth Geology Oceans ... Volcanoes Languages Dutch French German Italian ... Swedish Geography/History Explorers Flags Geography Inventors Other Topics Art and Artists Calendars Crafts Graphic Organizers ... Label Me! Printouts

71. Insecta Inspecta World - Killer Bees
Provides information about killer bees. Information includes colony life, differences between killer bees and honey bees, and the honey production rate of killer bees versus honey bees.
http://www.insecta-inspecta.com/bees/killer/index.html

Home
Ants
Bees

Beetles
...
Home
Africanized, Sometimes Called "Killer Bees"
Click Here to See a Movie on the Killer Bee In the movie The Swarm, great clouds of angry bees attack entire cities and sting hundreds of people to death. This is pure fiction. It could never happen. But folklore like this has arisen within the last ten years regarding the Africanized sometimes called "Killer Bee". The ancestors of the Africanized bee live throughout Africa, south of the Sahara Desert. African bees were accidentally introduced into the wild in South and North America during 1956. Brazilian scientists were attempting to create a new hybrid bee in the hopes of creating improved honey production. The Africanized bee escaped and began to dominate honey bee. The new hybrid, called an Africanized Bee, took many years established colonies throughout South and Central America. The bee is aggressive, easily agitated, and generally a bee with a bad attitude. The first Africanized bee was found in the United States in October 1990, in a southern area of Texas. The Africanized bee is expected to spread across the southern part of the country, where the winters aren't so harsh. Some scientists and entomologists believe that the Africanized bees will be able to adapt to colder weather and roam as far north as Montana. If this projection is true, it could become a big problem for a number fo reasons in the United States.
TAXONOMY
    Class: Insecta
    Order: Hymenoptra "Membrane Winged" (Wasps, Ants)

72. Bees -ENCHANTED LEARNING SOFTWARE
bees. A swarm of bees in May,. Is worth a load of hay. A swarm of bees in June,. Is worth a silver spoon. A swarm of bees in July,. Isn t worth a fly.
http://www.enchantedlearning.com/rhymes/Bees.shtml
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(transaction via PayPal As a thank-you bonus, site members have access to a banner-ad-free version of the site, with print-friendly pages. (Already a member? Click here.
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Learning
Software ... Paint Rhymes Online Bees
A swarm of bees in May, Is worth a load of hay. A swarm of bees in June, Is worth a silver spoon. A swarm of bees in July, Isn't worth a fly. THE END Rebus Rhymes : Topics All Rhymes Alligators/Crocodiles Animals Baby ... Z For a Schoolroom Place Mat, click here . You can learn school-related words at each meal! These high-quality vinyl mats are 11 1/2 inches x 17 1/2 inches tall. We also have Teddy bear puppets Available from ZoomStore.com Please support our store - all of the proceeds from ZoomStore go toward defraying the costs of keeping EnchantedLearning.com on the Web. Enchanted Learning Click to read Overview of Site What's New Enchanted Learning Home Monthly Activity Calendars Site map K-3 Beginning Books Crafts K-3 Themes Little Explorers Picture dictionary PreK/K Activities Rebus Rhymes Writing Cloze Activities Essay Topics Writing Activities Fiction The Test of Time Biology Animal Printouts Biology Label Printouts Biomes Birds ... Whales Physical Science Astronomy The Earth Geology Oceans ... Volcanoes Languages Dutch French German Italian ... Swedish Geography/History Explorers Flags Geography Inventors Other Topics Art and Artists Calendars Crafts Graphic Organizers ... Label Me! Printouts

73. Iowa Baseball Road Trip: Burlington Bees
Stadium information, individual ticket prices, and schedule.
http://www.geocities.com/iowa_baseball/burlington/index.html
Burlington Cedar Rapids Clinton Davenport ... Waterloo Burlington Bees Community Field, Apr. 29, 2001. Contact Information Office Address: 2712 Mt. Pleasant St., Burlington, IA 52601 Mailing Address: PO Box 824, Burlington, IA 52601 Phone: Fax: Press Box: Website: http://www.gobees.com/ Ownership/Management Operated by: Burlington Baseball Assocation, Inc. President: Dave Walker General Manager: Chuck Brockett Assistant General Manager/Baseball Operations: Randy Wehofer Assistant General Manager of Sales/Marketing: Adam Small Director of Group Outings: Trish Renken Head Groundskeeper: Dave Vander Heyden Field Staff Manager: Joe Szekely Hitting Coach: Patrick Anderson Pitching Coach: Tom Burgmeier Athletic Trainer: Mark Stubblefield Josh Brockett Community Field Stadium Address: 2712 Mt. Pleasant St., Burlington, IA 52601 Dimensions: LF: 338, LFA: 376, CF: 403, RFA: 375, RF: 315 Built: Capacity: 2003 Attendance: Directions: From U.S. 34, take U.S. 61 north to Mt. Pleasant Street, then east 1/8 mile. Gates Open: One hour before game time. Box Seats General Admission Senior/Student/Military General Admission: $4.00

74. Alien Bees - Professional Photographic Studio Flash Units
( alee-un beez) noun a highly intelligent race of bees, known for their powerful lights; linked to the abduction of many skilled and talented photographers.
http://www.alienbees.com/
Don't Worry Bee Happy! The AlienBees proudly introduce the newest accessory for your Hive, the Bee Clock!
Click Here

To Bee On Time!

Sign Up Today for The Buzz Line e-mail newsletter! We'll keep you in touch with the bees, and let you know about new products, new features, and any updates in the hive.
SIGN UP NOW!

ALIENBEES
('a-lee-un 'beez) noun
a highly intelligent race of bees, known for their powerful lights; linked to the abduction of many skilled and talented photographers. Species: Galaxius illuminatus. GREETINGS EARTHLINGS!
Welcome to the internet home of the AlienBees Invasion. Be not alarmed, for we have come in peace to nourish your photographic dexterity. Our mission is to solve your petty lighting squabbles. As the planet we come from is a dark one, lacking consistent gravity and light, we have perfected the science of consistent, portable illumination. Years of technology and shrewd elemental manipulation in our laboratories have produced the highly evolved, superior physics of lighting that we wish to share with your planet. Your choice is simple. Join us, and light your world in peace, or pursue your present course, and face destruction. We will be waiting for your answer.

75. Welcome Page For Bees4kids
Helps children, teachers and parents come to value bees. Builds on bees in the Curriculum Schools pack; combines activities for children with scientific information.
http://www.bees4kids.org.uk/
Site Contents:-
Press any button below to explore
Bees in the Curriculum
This site uses a "frameset for its index page which makes this area of the display the main window in which information is displayed. This means that the banner, contents list, and contact information are always on screen. The buttons on the left give access to html files through urls which can be accessed via bees4kids.org.uk/htmlfile where "htmlfile" is as follows:-
  • for "School's Pack" use "bitc/index.html" for "Why Bees" use "whybees/index.html" for "Beekeeper Support" use "helpbk/index.html" for "Places to Visit" use "placestovisit/index.html" for "Things for Children" use "4kids/index.html" for "News and Messages" use "news/index.html" for "Display Board" use "disboard/index.html" for "Help for Teachers" use "teachaid/index.html" for "Useful Websites" use "links/index.html"

76. UK Biodiversity Action Plans For Bees And Wasps
Status and conservation of 24 species.
http://www.ukbap.org.uk/beewasp.htm

77. Lune De Miel TM - Miel L'apiculteur TM - Bernard Michaud
French producer and packager of specialty honey. Useful information about honey and related products, as well as bees and beekeeping.
http://lunedemiel.tm.fr/indexroot.htm
window.location ='http://www.lunedemiel.fr/page4.php3';

78. Africanized Honey Bee Lesson Plans
Africanized Honey bees on the Move Lesson Plans. The Africanized honey bees have moved into the Southwest and are here to stay. In
http://ag.arizona.edu/pubs/insects/ahb/ahbhome.html
Africanized Honey Bees on the Move
Lesson Plans
The University of Arizona
Africanized Honey Bee Education Project
Africanized honey bees have moved into the Southwest and are here to stay. In addition to the safety issues that need to be addressed because of the defensiveness of these bees, honey bees are also fascinating subjects to study. These lesson plans were developed to familarize students with honey bees and bee safety issues through a variety of interesting activities.
These lesson plans are now available from the
Publication Distribution Center,
4042 North Campbell Avenue,
Tucson, Arizona 85719.
Phone: 520-318-7275
The price is $17.00, which includes shipping.
Ask for publication #196025.
general instructions and information
Choose a grade cluster:

79. Exotic Pet Paradise The Bargain Center, Exotic Animals And Supplies Like Repcal
Sales of pure honey and bees wax candles. Site includes shopping cart.
http://www.jandjfarms2001.com/
We now have ZUPREEM Avian Diet in stock Pet Foods and Supplies Higgins Zupreem Feeding Syringes Sugar Glider Food ... Small Animal Hides Small Animals Sugar Gliders, Flying Squirrels, Ferrets, Hedge Hogs, Short Tailed Possums Marine/Saltwater Fish Coral, Marine Foods, Freshwater Fish, Live Plants Collectables Metal Sculptures Safari Patchworks Garden Statues, Fountains ... Order Form Check out our Monthly Specials for great savings on our items!!! Site has new items added weekly please check back frequently.
Contact Information
To contact Exotic Pet Paradise or The Bargain Center use the info provided info below or to place an order use our Online Order Form.
Telephone FAX
765-922-4967 (Please call before faxing)
Postal address
Exotic Pet Paradise/The Bargain Center 10 South Washington St.
Sims, IN 46986 Electronic mail
Sales: Sales Department
Customer Support: Customer Service
Free counters provided by Andale
Last modified: December 27, 2003

80. Agriculture, Weights & Measures
Collection of tips by San Diego County.
http://www.co.san-diego.ca.us/cnty/cntydepts/landuse/agri/ahb_avoid.html
Africanized Honey Bees
How to Avoid Being Stung
Introduction
Africanized honey bees are a more temperamental relative of the common garden honey bee, which is known as the European honey bee. They were first introduced into Brazil in 1956, and have been steadily moving northward since then. They are currently found in the United States in parts of Texas, New Mexico, Arizona and California. Africanized honey bees are known to defend their colonies more intensively and with less provocation than other bees, and so it is important to know how to avoid being stung.
Stay away from honey bee colonies.
Africanized honey bees sting to defend themselves or their nest. If you can avoid disturbing them in any way, they usually will not sting. To avoid approaching a nest by accident, listen for the steady buzz produced by a colony and look for flying insects. Look for bees to nest in cavities such as holes in the ground, crevices in rocks, hollow trees, discarded tires, saguaro cactus cavities, or water meter boxes. Homeowners commonly encounter colonies when doing yard work. Do not climb a tree, kick over a log or roll over a rock without checking first for bees. If you do see a colony, do not stand in front of the entrance or in the flight path. Treat honey bee colonies as you would any other venomous creature, such as a snake or a scorpion. Be alert and stay away!

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