Close X
Monday, December 2, 2024
ADVT 
National

Beekeeper Gets Ontario Homeowner Out Of Sticky Situation By Removing 50,000 Bees

The Canadian Press, 30 Jun, 2015 11:01 AM
    CAMBRIDGE, Ont. — A Cambridge, Ont., neighbourhood was abuzz as about 50,000 bees and 45 kilograms of honey were ripped from inside the walls of a house.
     
    Beekeeper David Schuit says he spent about six hours on Monday outside the home on a tall ladder, cutting away honeycomb and carrying down pail after pail as the sticky substance dripped on — and under — his beekeeping hat.
     
    Schuit, who owns Saugeen Country Honey Inc. in Elmwood, says he could have torn the inside of the wall apart for easier access, but he made the damage sting less by removing the infestation from outside.
     
    As he worked to remove the buzzing insects' waxy work, he periodically smoked the bees to confuse them, and coated them lightly with liquid syrup.
     
    Schuit says the syrup is used to distract the bees from their displacement, because they love the sweet substance and will lick it off each other as he collects them.
     
    He says the homeowner now must deal with the damage to the walls, which isn't covered by insurance.
     
    He has disposed of what he says is unusable honey, but is keeping and rehabilitating the hive.
     
    While bee infestations aren't a particularly common problem, Schuit says affected homeowners shouldn't simply have the bees exterminated because when honeycomb is left in the walls, wax moths will eat away at it, and the honey will wreak havoc.
     
    "Just to put the bees down, that's the easiest part. The nightmare comes after that," he says.
     
    "I've had houses where the issue was in the living room, and they've put the bees down and I had to come in later on to clean up the mess. The honey flowed from the living room to the dining room to the bathroom."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    2 Vanderhoof, B.C., Men Face Shooting Charges Over 18-Year-Old Woman's Death

    2 Vanderhoof, B.C., Men Face Shooting Charges Over 18-Year-Old Woman's Death
    RCMP now say 27-year-old Kayne Penner faces charges of manslaughter and careless use of a firearm.

    2 Vanderhoof, B.C., Men Face Shooting Charges Over 18-Year-Old Woman's Death

    Surrey Shooting That Sent Two To Hospital Appears Targeted: RCMP

    Surrey Shooting That Sent Two To Hospital Appears Targeted: RCMP
    Residents reported hearing gunshots in their neighbourhood at about 1 a.m. Friday, and RCMP arrived to find the two wounded men.

    Surrey Shooting That Sent Two To Hospital Appears Targeted: RCMP

    Journalist's Defamation Trial Against John Furlong Draws To A Close

    Journalist's Defamation Trial Against John Furlong Draws To A Close
    VANCOUVER — Former Vancouver Olympics boss John Furlong defamed a journalist when he portrayed her as heartless, cruel and callous, said her lawyer as a heated civil trial drew to a close Friday.

    Journalist's Defamation Trial Against John Furlong Draws To A Close

    Concerns For Fish, Water Supply Grow Amid High B.C. Temperatures

    Concerns For Fish, Water Supply Grow Amid High B.C. Temperatures
    VANCOUVER — Environmental concerns are rising along with the soaring temperatures in British Columbia, where a heat wave has generated worries about forests fires, water supplies and fish habitats.

    Concerns For Fish, Water Supply Grow Amid High B.C. Temperatures

    B.C. Crown Appeals Second-Degree Murder Conviction To Supreme Court Of Canada

    B.C. Crown Appeals Second-Degree Murder Conviction To Supreme Court Of Canada
    In February 2013, Michael Newman was convicted of the first-degree murder of Mark Rozen who nine years earlier advertised a diamond engagement ring in a newspaper. 

    B.C. Crown Appeals Second-Degree Murder Conviction To Supreme Court Of Canada

    Government Protection For B.C.'s Glass Sponge Reefs Not Enough: Group

    Government Protection For B.C.'s Glass Sponge Reefs Not Enough: Group
    VICTORIA — Glass sponge reefs in British Columbia's Hecate Strait that were once considered extinct are now the focus of a federal protection effort that a conservation group calls too weak to save the fragile undersea treasures.

    Government Protection For B.C.'s Glass Sponge Reefs Not Enough: Group