Tuesday, 16 June 2026

What To Do With a Colony of Bees or Wasps

We have honey bees Apis mellifera living in a crevice between our attic and bedroom, and another colony living above our garage. We have social wasps Vespula sp living in a crevice in the wall above our back door. What are we doing about it? Nothing. And here's why:

The wasps and the bees don't have an amical relationship. When individual bees get old and start staggering around the courtyard the wasps are right there to 'clean up'. But neither wasps nor bees are interested in us, and they rarely venture inside the house. In both cases they installed themselves before we realised what was going on. Then it's too late. Ours is a very typical situation, and luckily in both cases the insects have chosen places where they can just get on with things undisturbed by us. Really the only time social insect colonies need to be moved on or eradicated is when they move into awkward places like chimneys and the space between windows and shutters. Fortunately bumble bees rarely make nest site choices that bring them into conflict with man, but social wasps (paper wasps, 'yellow jackets' and the like), hornets and honey bees quite often do. It doesn't help that people are scared of them, a few people are dangerously allergic to them, and your idea of an awkward place might not coincide with mine.

 

A swarm of Honey Bees moving in to the gap between our bedroom and the attic.

Swarm of Honey Bees, France.

Removing colonies alive is possible, but messy and expensive. Your house insurance might cover it if you are lucky. So most removals are done at the expense of the lives of the insects and they are poisoned before the nest is removed. To do this legally in the case of honey bees you need to establish there is a genuine safety risk for people. A good professional pest controller should mostly refuse to eradicate colonies.

 

My apiarist friend Bernard removing a colony of Honey Bees Apis mellifera (Fr. Abeilles domestiques) from a window.

Apiarist removing a colony of honey bees, France.

So now you are asking 'Why remove the nest if the insects are dead?' Well, a colony of dead larvae is an easy target for other predatory insects. An abandoned store of honey is easy work for other honey bees to rob. They don't know it's poisoned, they will be poisoned, and their colony that they take the bounty back to will be poisoned in their turn. It is not legal to contaminate the food chain and so the entire nest needs to be removed to prevent it being robbed.

 

European Wasps Vespula germanica (Fr. GuĂȘpe germanique).

Common Wasps Vespula vulgaris, France.

You would be mistaken to think that blocking access to the nest is sufficient to protect the food chain. It's virtually impossible to identify and effectively block all the possible access holes. I know it would be at our place, with its crumbling mortar, decaying timber and worn stone walls. Added to that, with the current cycle of drought and flood the building will move and gaps will appear. Once one bee or wasp has found the free food, the whole of their colony will arrive to collect it within days.

 

One of the wasps preying on an old dying Honey Bee in our courtyard.

Common Wasp Vespula vulgaris preying on an old dying Honey Bee Apis mellifera, France.

For what to do about a swarm of honey bees ie when the colony is out in the open looking for a new home but not yet installed, read my blog post: What to do About a Swarm of Bees.

2026 Holiday Day 13

The Hanseatic city of Lubeck. They did like their bricks.









Monday, 15 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 12

Fischmarkt on a Sunday morning. Fish sandwich, coffee, and a strawberry croissant whilst being entertained by intergenerational euro-power-pop ballads.





After lunch at the only traditional Brewhouse in Hamburg we went to the Prototype Museum.



Sunday, 14 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 11

The Hamburg Flaktower.




The back to the apartment for a couple of hours of feet-up.

Saturday, 13 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 10

Yesterday our main plan was visiting the Altonaer Museum. The original intention was to visit Heligoland, but as soon as we arrived in Hamburg it became obvious that the weather wasn't going to co-operate.

We lunched at LUX-kantine, the city's restaurant for it's employees, people on low incomes - and visitors who pay a donation towards its operations : 1€. It's still incredibly good value.

The Altonaer Museum is likewise great value, the highlight for us being the old house interiors. Being old house interiors they're as dark as a boot, so pictures don't work.



Near the Altonaer station is an allegorical statue showing the towns of Altonaer and Hamburg fighting over fishing rights.





Friday, 12 June 2026

2026 Holiday Day 9

Model trains and Tchaikovsky.

After Minatur Wuderland we went to a concert.





The view from our seats



Thursday, 11 June 2026

A Biological Multitool in the Strawberry Patch

A recent study has described the Migrant Hover Fly Eupeodes corollae (Fr. Syrphe des corolles) as a flying 'multitool', which offers pollination, can act as a vector for beneficial microbes, and is a biological control for grey mould disease in strawberries. Wow! Plus their larvae eat aphids!

 

 Female Migrant Hover Fly.

Female Migrant Hover Fly Eupeodes corollae, France.

Scientists in Sweden used the hover flies to carry the yeast Metschnikowia fruiticola between strawberry flowers in greenhouses so it would attack the grey mould Botrytis cinerea. At the same time the hover flies pollinated the strawberry flowers. The flowers pollinated by the hover flies produce better quality fruit that is bigger and a more symmetrical consumer pleasing shape. Their results showed that the hover fly activity on the flowers significantly reduced grey mould on the strawberry fruit once harvested and in cold storage. This occured even without the yeast biological control, but was even more pronounced when the yeast was present.

This species is native to Europe, North Africa and Asia, and quite abundant. With the presence of active adults and larvae you can practice interated pest control in your own garden, and enjoy these little natural gems. 

 

 Mating Migrant Hover Flies in our garden.

Mating Migrant Hover flies Eupeodes corollae, France.

The Migrant Hover Fly is, as the English name suggests, a migratory species and one of the two most abundant species of hover fly in Europe. Some years there will be massive numbers crossing the Channel from France to Britain. The adults are about 11 mm long, with yellow comma shaped marks on their abdomens.


Further reading: https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10340-025-01971-6


2026 Holiday Day 8

Yesterday we took ourselves in to Hamburg by train and then caught a couple of ferries. We didn't walk far, Susan's leg is still a problem.