The Telegram (St. John's)

Sizable bee colony removed from wall of a vacant home

- BY COLIN MACLEAN

A constructi­on company renovating a home in Hamilton, near Malpeque, recently received an unexpected­ly large surprise when it started work in the attic.

Workers found what turned out to be a large honeybee hive, which stretched from the attic floor down into a wall on the second storey.

They originally thought the insects were hornets and called a pest control expert. When the exterminat­or saw they were, in fact, honeybees he recommende­d they find themselves a beekeeper to remove them alive.

So, they called James Maclean of Island Blend Farms of Southwest Lot 16.

His farm raises Holstein dairy cattle, but Maclean took an interest in beekeeping a few years ago and has been raising a handful of hives for about two years.

“I can’t really put a finger on what I like so much about bees.

I enjoy seeing their progress in the hives and helping them out where I can,” he said.

“They are simply a fascinatin­g

creature to watch.”

When Maclean got to the house, he quickly discovered the bees in the attic were the tip of an iceberg.

“Once I got down a little further I realized it was a lot bigger than everybody thought it was, so I had to go cut into the wall and get them out that way,” said Maclean.

He cut a large hole in the interior wall, which revealed a sizable bee hive. He estimated it was about three feet wide by three feet long and the comb was almost a foot thick.

In the wild, bees build their hives directly into larger structures like tree hollows or other nooks and crannies.

Cameron Menzies, P.E.I.’S provincial apiarist, said bees do occasional­ly set up shop in residentia­l properties, but it is more common further south, such as the U.S. Bees find homes attractive because they are heated through the winter, which helps the colony conserve energy and survive.

The home in question had been unoccupied for about two years, and Maclean guessed by the size of the hive the bees probably moved in shortly thereafter.

Maclean spent two days (he was joined on the second day by his brother, Curtis,) slowly removing the bees using a process called a cutout. It involves removing comb from the wild colony and using rubber bands to transplant it into a frame. That frame is then placed with others in a hive box, which the beekeeper can then take home. If all goes as planned, the bees that were on the transplant­ed comb will hatch a new queen and form a new colony.

Maclean said he took away one full colony plus another two proto-hives, which are smaller and should eventually hatch a queen.

It was a good haul and a great learning experience, said Maclean, as it was a first for him.

He’s quarantine­d the new hives from the old ones for the time being but will eventually move them together.

Maclean will be posting updates on his Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/islandblen­dfarms.

 ?? COLIN MACLEAN - JOURNAL PIONEER ?? James Maclean of Island Blend Farms in Southwest Lot 16 recently received a call to remove a large honeybee hive from the wall of a home in Hamilton, near Malpeque.
COLIN MACLEAN - JOURNAL PIONEER James Maclean of Island Blend Farms in Southwest Lot 16 recently received a call to remove a large honeybee hive from the wall of a home in Hamilton, near Malpeque.

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