Learn How to Successfully Host Mason and Leafcutter Bees

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  • čas přidán 14. 02. 2022
  • VIDEOS AND BLOGS WE MENTIONED IN THIS VIDEO:
    Take a peak Inside your nesting block and see what your baby bee are doing - • Part 2 - Sneak a Peek ...
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    Mono Wasp Predators - • Mono Wasps Inside Maso...
    Watch Mason Bees Emerge - • Watch How Mason Bees E...
    Youth Program - Free printable workbooks and work sheets - • Watch How Mason Bees E...
    How to Make Mud Hole - • Watch How Mason Bees E...
    Predators Inside a Block - rentmasonbees.com/partners/
    Fall Harvest - Watch how we clean your bees - • Mason Bee Fall Harvest...
    How to Transition Old Nesting Material to the Proper Kind and save your bees - • How to Transition Old ...
    Learn how to create a great habitat for solitary bees and welcome them into your yard. We'll teach you what a solitary bees is, best practices to raise them, how to rid predators and care for your bees and how to spot one in your yard.
    WHAT ARE SOLITARY BEES? Unlike the social honey bees, solitary bees do not have a queen, do not live in a hive and do not produce honey. Without the need to protect a queen and honey, solitary bees are gentle, friendly and non-aggressive. Each female must find or create her own nest, and collect all of the food needed to feed herself and her eggs.
    ONE OF NATURE'S BEST POLLINATORS Honey bees collect pollen on their back legs, whereas solitary bees are belly floppers. They flop onto blossoms collecting pollen all over their bodies. This enables them to pollinate 95% of the flowers they land on and they visit over 2,000 flowers a day. They truly are one of nature's best pollinators.
    HOW TO HOST: Our program makes it easy to become a solitary bee host. Gardeners purchase a bee kit that comes with house, nesting block, clay and bees. You release solitary bees into your yard and rent our nesting blocks for your bees. When you release the bees into your yard they will pollinate and enrich your habitat and ecosystem. Solitary means alone… by themselves. They don’t have a hive or queen to protect. Each female finds all her own food and all her own nests. They use pre-made holes in your environment and will lay babies in your yard and your nesting block. Harvesting and cleaning the cocoons and blocks is a critical step when hosting solitary bees to remove harmful predators. When you rent from us we take care of the maintenance and cleaning for you. You keep the black house and return the nesting blocks back to us. The following year, you will just need to reorder an “insert” with a sterilized nesting block and clean bees. Please watch our Fall Harvest Video below to see how we clean them.
    Here are some of our favorite videos about solitary bees:
    •PBS did a beautiful video on mason bees and how they build their nests - • Watch This Bee Build H...
    •Life Cycle of a Mason Bee - • Life Cycle of the Orch...
    •Mason Bee Tribute Video in macro lens and slow motion - • Tribute to Pollinators...
    •Inside a Mason & Leafcutter Block (the importance of why you need to harvest and clean… remove predators) • Predators On the Insid...
    •Our Mason Bee Fall Harvest (why you Rent… we do all the cleaning) - • Mason Bee Fall Harvest...
    •What Are Your Baby Bees Doing? Sneak a peak inside to see how mason bees develop. This is a 3 part series. Here’s number 1 • Part 1 - What are your...
    Birds & Blooms Magazine and Mother Earth News both published articles this month on solitary bees. In addition to all the above information, you’ll learn so much more reading this article in Mother Earth News: “Backyard Solitary Bees” www.motherearthnews.com/homes...
    Please sign up for our newsletter so you can get all the important information we send to our hosts on successful hosting tips.
    Newsletter Sign up - rentmasonbees.com/newsletter-...
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