Bee Freeze

Started by softgroups, June 18, 2009, 01:05:12 PM

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softgroups

Is it true that if you freeze a bee, she will get back to life if you her to sun light?!

riverrat

I believe that to be an urban legend ;)
never take the top off a hive on a day that you wouldn't want the roof taken off your house

Scadsobees

Sortof.

If you are walking near a hive on a sunny winter day that has warmed a little (in the mid to upper 30's deg F), you will see numerous bees in the snow.  They rest there, but the snow sucks the heat out, and they go comatose.

They "die" and appear really dead.  But if it is still within a few hours of them falling to the snow and "dying", you can pick them up, warm them in your hands,  and they come back to life.

They aren't really dead, but they do go rather dormant.  It doesn't work though if you wait more than a few hours.  Then they really are dead.

So you probably could "kill" a bee by putting it in a freezer for a while, bring her out when she appears dead, and the heat of the sun would reinvigourate her.  But if you forget her in the freezer, no amount of heat will bring her back.

Rick
Rick

NasalSponge

One fall day my kids brought a bunch of "dead" drones into the house and put them by the wood burner....next thing ya know they where flying everywhere.

luvin honey

Sounds a bit like hypothermia :)
The pedigree of honey
Does not concern the bee;
A clover, any time, to him
Is aristocracy.
---Emily Dickinson

sc-bee

Just "don't eat the yellow snow" :-D!
John 3:16

G3farms

Quote from: sc-bee on June 18, 2009, 04:09:40 PM
Just "don't eat the yellow snow" :-D!

You mean thats not honey in the snow????? :?

G3
those hot bees will have you steppin and a fetchin like your heads on fire and your keister is a catchin!!!

Bees will be bees and do as they please!

mgmoore7

A few nights ago, I put some bees in the fridge to get them to settle down a bit so I can more easily pick them up for some apitherapy.  I left them in too long.  Only a few appears to be alive.  I used those bees and put the rest outside still in the container.  By morning all were gone. 

Take it for what it is worth or try it for yourself.

sc-bee

Chill is one thing Freeze is another :evil:
John 3:16

Scadsobees

Quote from: G3farms on June 18, 2009, 04:13:10 PM

You mean thats not honey in the snow????? :?

G3

Ever smell that "honey"?? :-X
Rick

Eshu

Cold bees will go into torpor and can be revived from it.  But I think a hard freeze will kill them.

You can put cockroaches in the freezer for several hours then revive them.  They are tough.

G3farms

Quote from: Scadsobees on June 19, 2009, 10:46:20 AM
Quote from: G3farms on June 18, 2009, 04:13:10 PM

You mean thats not honey in the snow????? :?

G3

Ever smell that "honey"?? :-X

Never did smell it but it sure did taste funny :-P

G3
those hot bees will have you steppin and a fetchin like your heads on fire and your keister is a catchin!!!

Bees will be bees and do as they please!

doak

Great day, what talk. :roll: :shock: :'( :'( :'( :) ;)doak

G3farms

Yeah I'm just glad I didn't step in it :-D

G3
those hot bees will have you steppin and a fetchin like your heads on fire and your keister is a catchin!!!

Bees will be bees and do as they please!

Michael Bush

If their body temp gets down around 33 you can warm them up and "bring them back to life" but if you actually freeze them solid they die.
My website:  bushfarms.com/bees.htm en espanol: bushfarms.com/es_bees.htm  auf deutsche: bushfarms.com/de_bees.htm  em portugues:  bushfarms.com/pt_bees.htm
My book:  ThePracticalBeekeeper.com
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"Everything works if you let it."--James "Big Boy" Medlin