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Davey Bulletin Jan-Feb 2019

The Davey Tree Expert Company provides residential and commercial tree service and landscape service throughout North America. Read our Flipbooks for helpful tips and information on proper tree and lawn care.

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13 January/February 2019 | THE DAVEY BULLETIN While helping Refuge of Hope Ministries in Canton, Ohio, clear a lot for their expansion project, a crew from the Canton R/C office found a sweet, yet stinging surprise in one of the trees. "We run into hornet and yellow jackets nests in the field, but it's not often we encounter honey bees," said Jeffrey Wernet, district manager. Crew members Steve Barchalk, foreman, Mike Ellis, foreman, and Jeremy Baker, trimmer, felled one of the last remaining trees on the lot. That's when they discovered a honey bee nest about 15 feet up inside the tree. Barchalk called Mueller Honey Bee Rescue, which is his cousin's business, to see if they wanted to keep the bees and they did, Wernet said. The crew cut the portion of the log containing the nest and helped load it on a trailer. "With all of this talk over the last couple of years about the honey bee populations declining, nobody wants to see a hive die out," Wernet said. "I'm glad our crew had the mindset to do something to preserve the hive." The nest was removed from the tree and is now living inside a beehive, said Emily Mueller, from Mueller Honey Bee Rescue. On the last warm day of 2018, the bees were still alive, and Mueller anticipates they will make it to spring. Right and Above Left: Crew members of the Canton R/C office helped a member of the Mueller Honey Bee Rescue load the log containing the honey bees onto a trailer to be transported to the rescue center. Photo Credit: Emily Mueller, Mueller Honey Bee Rescue BEE HIVE THRIVES IN NEW HOME Should other crews run into a honey bee hive while out in the field, Wernet's advice is to call a local bee keeper to relocate them. "Most local bee keepers are pretty open to doing what the Muellers did to get this hive," Wernet said. "They realize the populations are low and they want to preserve them too." The honey bee nest was about 15 feet up inside the tree and wasn't discovered until the tree was felled. The bees have a new home in a bee box in the Mueller's backyard. Photo Credit: Emily Mueller, Mueller Honey Bee Rescue

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