Politeness pays

Author: Holm, E.
Language: English, Portuguese
Year of publication: 2001
Number of pages: 1
Type of publication: Article In BfD Journal
Publisher: Bees for Development
Edition: #60
Pages in original publication: 8
Publication location: Text on this website

Take a moment to reflect what happens when you visit your bees. You open up their house without warning, you take out their furniture so you can look at their behaviour, you shake them about, and then you take away their food stores. Imagine if someone came to your home and behaved in the same way you would at least demand politeness from the intruder. So, here are the rules of politeness for visitors to the homes of bees.

You can see, hear and feel what the bees intend to do:

It is worth learning the different sounds the bees make whilst you work with them. The sounds tell you what behaviour to expect.

Some bees are always defensive and will attack you. Then you must dress so that bees cannot penetrate your clothing and perhaps work during the night. Bees are usually sensitive to proper handling. However, like all animals, there will always be exceptions!

 

You can reduce the likelihood of attack by opening only part of the hive, keeping the part you are not examining covered up. Another preventive method is to examine the most defensive colonies last. When one colony attacks you it can alert bees in other colonies that could also participate in the attack.

 

In conclusion, you are being most polite when you listen and respond to the signs from your counterpart, even if it is a colony of bees.

 

EXPLANATION

Pheromone A chemical substance produced by a bee (or any animal) to convey a message to another of the same species.

First published in Bees for Development Journal 60