Could This Happen To Your Home ?
Yappy Beeman Yappy Beeman
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 Published On Dec 25, 2023

Coud This Happen To Your Home is my little gift to you for the Holiday Season. I am very thankful to each of you for your support in my work and expression through my creations. The opportunity to rescue and rehome bees and save them from extermination as well as to educate about the need for bees and the sustainability of all things by the bees is an honor to share. I wish each of you the happiest Christmas celebration ever and that you found Joy with family and friends together.
Don't forget to wish Maria and get well soon in the comments and send her some joy and love. She is a great person and I wish her well.

In this video, I travelled to North East Alabama to remove a wild colony of bees that made a home where they didn't need to bee. Unfortunately, the natural home for bees to normally to find and grow in isn't so available as it once was. Bees naturally would find hollow voids in old hardwood trees to make a new home. But through the years those resources have depleted and they do what's natural and find them elsewhere. In the dark voids of homes. Thankfully, homeowners can find someone like YappyBeeman to remove them safely and rehome them away from heavy residential areas where they can rebuild, thrive and make lots of golden honey.

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Yappy Beeman is a professional bee remover performing live honey bee removals in Alabama as "Alabama Bee Rescue" and relocates them to apiaries away from residential areas so they can rebuild and thrive as a honey bee colony producing honey. Yappy is an Alabama Beekeepers association member that has performed over 1000 live bee removals. Yappy with the help of his great friends Jpthebeeman, 628 Dirtrooster bees, Jeff Horchoff and many others, I have learned many skills to remove bee swarms and honey bee colonies safely for the bees and home owners alike.

(C) 2023 Yappy Beeman. This video and the trademark YAPPY BEEMAN is intellectual property owned exclusively and shall not be copied or used in any way without prior written consent. Consent requests may be directed to [email protected].

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Here is a little bee educational material for ya.


Honey bees appear to have their center of origin in South and Southeast Asia (including the Philippines), as all the extant species except Apis mellifera are native to that region. Notably, living representatives of the earliest lineages to diverge (Apis florea and Apis andreniformis) have their center of origin there.[2]

The first Apis bees appear in the fossil record at the Eocene-Oligocene boundary (34 mya), in European deposits. The origin of these prehistoric honey bees does not necessarily indicate Europe as the place of origin of the genus, only that the bees were present in Europe by that time. Few fossil deposits are known from South Asia, the suspected region of honey bee origin, and fewer still have been thoroughly studied.

No Apis species existed in the New World during human times before the introduction of A. mellifera by Europeans. Only one fossil species is documented from the New World, Apis nearctica, known from a single 14 million-year-old specimen from Nevada.[10]

The close relatives of modern honey bees – e.g., bumblebees and stingless bees – are also social to some degree, and social behavior is considered to be a trait that predates the origin of the genus. Among the extant members of Apis, the more basal species make single, exposed combs, while the more recently evolved species nest in cavities and have multiple combs, which has greatly facilitated their domestication.
Africanized honey bees (known colloquially as "killer bees") are hybrids between European stock and the East African lowland subspecies A. m. scutellata; they are often more aggressive than European honey bees and do not create as much of a honey surplus, but are more resistant to disease and are better foragers.[23] Accidentally released from quarantine in Brazil, they have spread to North America and constitute a pest in some regions. However, these strains do not overwinter well, so they are not often found in the colder, more northern parts of North America. The original breeding experiment for which the East African lowland honey bees were brought to Brazil in the first place has continued (though not as originally intended). Novel hybrid strains of domestic and re-domesticated Africanized honey bees combine high resilience to tropical conditions and good yields. They are popular among beekeepers in Brazil.

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