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A No Yellow Jacket Garden Party

Okay, here I was prepping my garden on the Friday before of my upcoming garden party, which was on Sunday.  I am potting up a gorgeous pale pink geranium cutting that I wanted to showcase indoors at the party.  I tussle a pot that had some potting soil in it and I get ready to pot up my geranium and what do I see?  A ton of yellow jacket bees!  One bit me on my arm, another bit me on my foot, and one was stuck to my leg ready to bite.  I ran like a mad woman.  When I finally caught my breath inside my house, I made sure no bee followed me in or got stuck in my mane of rough curly black hair.  Then I slowly ventured back out with a coat on this time, and from afar took a look at my potting bench.  And I see a group of yellow jackets just hovering on the ground in that area.

The cutting was of this geranium

Honestly I was confused.  I have been working in my garden all week getting ready for this year’s Garden Party and Ladies Lunch, and I was potting plants and what not all week, and this just happened out of the blue.  It’s like I disrupted some hive, and now I was afraid I might have to cancel the party or just tell the ladies to stay inside.  Do you see the irony in this folks?  A garden party where you are told not to stroll in the garden.  Seriously, it sounded ridiculous even to me.

So in a panic I called a bunch of bee exterminators, and got a hold of one company called Bay Area Beebusters.  The gentleman I spoke to was named George and seemed very knowledgeable on yellow jacket bees.  I begged him to please come the same day, I explained that I was hosting a garden party a couple of days later, and I needed this yellow jacket problem taken care of before then.  He had one engagement he was heading to – an elementary school with a yellow jacket problem.  Of course, that was a priority!  Can you imagine yellow jacket bees in a kid’s area?  George said he would call me after he was done with that service call, and then head over to my place

While on the phone with George he did answer my first question, which was, “What happened? I have been working in this area all week, why do I see yellow jackets now?”  George said that I was probably working near a yellow jacket hive near my potting bench and didn’t even know it was there.  As long as I didn’t bother them they just left me alone.  But it just so happens on this Friday I must have knocked over a pot that disrupted the hive.  He also mentioned that many times yellow jackets build their hives in the side holes of pots!

I couldn’t focus on anything else the rest of the day, I had so much to prep for the party, but this bee problem just dampened my mood.  I was anxiously waiting for George.

George finally arrived at 2pm.  I showed him were the problem area was, and he went to work.  He came with his assistant Teresa, his assistant in training.  First thing they did is stand and observe the area where I got bit.  He said they like to observe for 15-20 minutes, sometimes even 30 minutes; he actually timed himself.

Once he saw how the bees were moving around and where they were hovering, he determined where the area of the hive might be – in this case it was under a flagstone next to the broom. Then both George and Teresa suited up and got read to tackle the yellow jacket problem.

George sprayed a couple cans of some poison into the hive, and then he removed the hive.  He then sprayed more poison into the hive so that the bees that were out foraging, when they come back they eat the poison and just die in there.  George said this would take care of the problem.  Just to be safe, he asked that I stay away from this area for a couple of days.  I asked him if I could have people here and he said as long as we stayed away from the potting table we were okay.  I also asked if I should move all my supplies and potting soil to prevent it from happening again.  He said it wasn’t necessary, that it was just a random event that it happened in that area. Folks, I was so lucky! I have been working in this area making cuttings all week long clueless that the hive was right there.  Unbelievable! I am truly fortunate.

Since I had the bee experts here and George seemed like he knew a lot about them, I asked him to take a look at my fountain, which was covered in bees.  As it turns out, these are honeybees that were there to drink the fountain water.  George asked me if any neighbor close by has a bee vat or bee hive.  Apparently honeybees go looking for water if they don’t have a water source near by.  In my case, my neighbor does have bee vats, and it seems there is no water for these honeybees close by, so they come to my garden and my fountain to quench their thirst.

George has been dealing with bees of all sorts for over 30 years, and he loves to talk.  He was sharing so much information about bees and all sorts of topics that I just started taking notes, and he was okay with that.  Here are some interesting facts that George shared with me.

By the end of George’s visit, I knew more about yellow jacket bees than I ever did before.  I asked him if I could write a story about him and this whole incident, and he happily agreed.  It all worked out well, and by Sunday for the garden party any sign of yellow jacket bees were all gone.  The party was a wonderful success and the ladies had a great time.

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