This isn't going to be much of a post, but I thought I'd bring you up to date about the bees in the kitchen wall/floor/whatever.
The link below is, I think, the last thing I shared about them. The story just got worse and worse last year.
There were always a bunch of live bees in the house, primarily in the kitchen and in my bedroom. Lots of dead ones on the floor. I tried to give them a way to get out by taking one of the screens off a window, but they simply couldn't figure that out. It only gave them another way to get in. Stopped that nonsense.
The closest places that deal with bees in your home construction are in Traverse City and Grand Rapids- both an hour-and-a-half away, in opposite directions. The Traverse City one wouldn't return my calls. I finally got the Grand Rapids guy, and he would do everything we needed, including reconstruction of whatever he had to rip out (think $$$). But he wasn't willing to come in the fall because the bees are more aggressive then. "Call me in April."
One bee expert said there was an 85% chance they would live through the winter. One said there was an 85% chance they would die over the winter and the honey would start oozing out of the wall or ceiling or whatever, depending on where they were. But since no one would come, it didn't seem to make much difference. I guess if we found honey we'd at least know where they were.
At the onset of really cold weather, I sprayed the heck out of the hole where they had been getting in. I mean, I sort of hated to do it, but living with bees in the house forever isn't really an option. I got stung about 5 times last year. And I'm supposed to avoid that so I don't get re-sensitized.
Then, I bought some insecticidal spray foam and filled the crack. And all the cracks nearby where they might find access.
Come spring of 2025... no bees.
Come July of 2025... they're back. But not very many of them. What a dummy. I didn't check the other side of the door.
There was one episode of a bunch of them getting in the house. I got stung twice in just a few minutes. I sprayed them and hightailed it to Sunny and slept in my trailer that night!
Only got stung once more this year when my worst fear came true- I stepped on a bee that wasn't dead when I was barefoot. But it was at bedtime and an icepack all night kept it from swelling.
I've been spraying the hole every night at dusk since then. The population seems to be very small now, but they just don't give up and move somewhere else. I'll do the same this fall- spray deep in the hole and then seal it with the same foam stuff.
But you can see in this picture taken today that there are still live bees using that crack.
Hopefully, one more winter, and more sealing will get this under control.
In other news, I was so good today the house smells like gold stars! Actually, it smells like pumpkin spice because I'm making some pumpkin custard, but that's about the same thing.
![]() | See Bees! |