bees and then bees
May. 21st, 2004 06:46 pmJapanese snowbell attracts what look like genuine honeybees. I hadn't seen very many of them at all in Seattle.
The black-backed bumblebees don't touch the snowbell. They lurrve the ceanothus alongside.
I'd thought that rosemary had figured out how not to get eaten by insects, but this one was covered with a hundred spittlebug nests.
Oh, I missed a stage on the racetrack -- it's CRAB BEAR BUNY RUN.
The black-backed bumblebees don't touch the snowbell. They lurrve the ceanothus alongside.
I'd thought that rosemary had figured out how not to get eaten by insects, but this one was covered with a hundred spittlebug nests.
Oh, I missed a stage on the racetrack -- it's CRAB BEAR BUNY RUN.
no subject
Date: 2004-05-21 09:25 pm (UTC)I've seen honeybees, but now that you mention it, not all that many. Many more yellowjackets, other wasps, and some bumblebees.
I've been told that bumblebees really are soft, but I've never had the courage to pet one.
no subject
Date: 2004-05-21 09:47 pm (UTC)There's a smallish bee with a lot of black on it -- dunno its name -- that I figured was the local replacement for the honeybee. Need a bee key.
I wonder how you talk the bumblebee into holding still.
no subject
Date: 2004-05-21 10:04 pm (UTC)They sit fairly still while they're on flowers. Not for very long, though.
no subject
Date: 2004-05-21 11:06 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-05-22 12:09 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2004-05-22 09:23 am (UTC)"Hive" seems like it's overstating the case somehow, though technically that's what it was.