Gallery

Gallery content - both video and photo

Evil Lurks in Dirty Nesting Holes

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Many people think that you can just drill a hole in a piece of wood, or put a rubber band around some dried reeds, and that's providing healthy nesting sites for native bees.  Think again.  If you don't line the nesting holes with replaceable paper straws - whether you buy them or roll them yourself - you are doing more harm than good.  Guess what:  bees collect pollen in those holes [which attracts pollen mites]; bees deposit nectar in those holes [which is irresistible to ants and others, who kill the bee larvae to get to the sweet goodness]; wasp predators love to lay

2010 Spring Hatch

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Spring was unusually warm in the east this year, so the bees hatched a bit early.  More photo ops for me!   I've already taken hundreds of pictures of the bees hatching from their cocoons and nesting (hooray for digital film,) so have a look - and if you capture some cool bee activity that you'd like to share, please send it to me, and I'll post it here, with kudos to you.

Bees Heart Flowers!

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These are wonderful photos showing a variety of native bees doing what they do best . . . pollinating!  I found most of them via internet searches and would love to give credit to the photographers, if you happen to have that info.

Look Inside

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You won't believe all the strange (and sometimes pretty nasty) things you'll find when you open a cocoon that's been invaded by mites, parasitic wasps and other bee predators.  Some scenes might not be suitable for younger viewers:  ;-)

Two of the cells started hatching as I photographed them.  See the legs?  Ewww.
These native bees use leaves instead of mud, and pollinate all summer long.
Note how round the loose leaf pieces in the center are.  Such precision!
They died of chalk brood, but not the type that threatens honey bees.
All the juicy guts had been eaten, leaving this mass of dry wings and body parts
These might also be beetle larvae.  Any one out there know?
Clumps of OMB cocoons floating in an oval pail of water as they're being washed.
These Chalcid wasp larvae have survived by eating the OMB larva.
The center chamber is teeming with - gross - Hairy-fingered Mites.
This larva was killed by spores of Chalkbrood fungi.
Straw insert chambers filled with healthy OMB cocoons.
Chalcid wasps eat [the bee larva] and run [by chewing through the paper liner].
Chalcid wasps have invaded these straws and eaten their way out.
These Cuckoo Bees eat the OMB provisions, but not the bee larva itself.
Too much trapped moisture can result in mold, mildew, and dead bees.

Birds in Winter

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I know.  These are birds, not bees - but I just love taking photos of nature.  So when the east coast experienced more than two feet of glorious snow in December, 2009 I just had to try to capture it all before it disappeared.  Little did I know it would only be the first major storm of three!

A Man, and a Woman. . .
Female Cardinal with snowy beak.
Two Pileated Woodpeckers and a Downy in our backyard.  Life is magical.
Are you lookin' at ME??  (With a Robert de Niro accent, of course.)
Cardinal male through the window
Wow.  What a gorgeous specimen of a - Cardinal.
A contemplative female Cardinal.

Galleries

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We've all heard that "pictures speak louder than words".  Here are some of my favorite images and videos of our native bees at work, and the results of their labor.  Enjoy!

Our Bee Houses in the Community

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Our mission at Our Native Bees is to educate people about our valuable and efficient native pollinators, and to help them increase solitary bee populations in their own communities as a supplement to honey bee pollination. We're proud to say that our Plan Bee Houses now grace the gardens of many schools, parks, corporate headquarters and historic homes throughout the area. Take a look at who has our Plan Bee Houses hanging in their gardens!

Members of the Environmental Research Club at Thomas Jefferson High School
Bee houses in use at Meadowlark Gardens
Close-up of two bee houses at Meadowlark Gardens, Vienna, Virginia
Visit Meadowlark Gardens in the spring to see the mason bees bees hard at work.
Bee house located at The Nature Conservancy headquarters in Arlington, Virginia

Nesting Behavior

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These bees are so fascinating to observe, which is way I take so many photos of them!  The first time you hear them crunching out of their cocoons, you'll be hooked.  You'll watch them haul mouthfuls of mud and nectar, see their fuzzy bellies covered with yellow pollen, observe the way they back into the nesting straw to lay an egg, hear the loud buzzing if another insect enters their nest, witness the precision with which they cap a straw with mud -- and you'll never have to worry about being stung!

Plugged holes:  wasp and bee
My husband found this natural nest when splitting firewood.
Natural nesting sites for native bees
Another close-up of the mason bee nests in nature
A newly-hatched Osmia Lignaria male emerges from his cocoon (Keith Loh)
Composite of multiple images shows the Mason Bees approaching their nesting box
A female takes a breather in her nesting hole.
OMB flying from her nesting hole
Beautiful mud-capped straws filled with OMB cocoons
This is actually a wasp who has laid his eggs in a weep hole in a brick wall.

Photo and Video Galleries

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Photos and videos of native bees, bee houses, etc.

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