Love the content, the framing and composition of the shots. It's lovely to watch and the sound is great. It's one of the reason its a joy to watch this channel. ❤️
That was a very enjoyable video. I watch a handful of TH-cam Bee Keeper channels, and I really enjoyed how you carefully explained every step of the operation. Well done. I have been subscribed already and I'm always happy to see one of your videos pop up. Keep up the good work and Merry Christmas to you and yours as well as the rest of your production crew. Take care and, as always, Semper Fi.
My mechanic Dad had a vehicle stored in the back yard that looked like that one. A Packard maybe? That was 60 years ago, in Albuquerque, NM. Hot and dry like the area U R in.
Try to use a hive box with a removable bottom. Put the box on top of the fuel tank with the bottom removed and the bees will all move up into it. If the new hive and old hive are separate, they'll stick around.
I hate getting stung on the hands doing a cutout. BUT!!! I have finally found a great pair of gloves that don't clag up with honey. My expensive bee gloves tend to distort and clag up. If interested I can send a photo and where to get them.
Using rubber bands is asking for more work. The bees perceive the rubber as a permanent fixture and will latently begin to affix the comb to the frame. The first thing you should have done was set the front edge of the bottom board to the edge of the tank. The bees would have marched in with little or no encouragement. What you should have used is three pound tinsel strength string with the frayed edges. It is strong enough to hold the comb in place and light enough for the bees to remove as they attach the comb. This was my first time watching you and you are very entertaining, I hope you don't run into many hybrid bees or else you are in real trouble.
He used string at first, moved to rubber bands on a tip. The bees chew them to pieces and throw them out. The comb gets fixed to the frames. It's in a lot of the previous episodes, which are just as entertaining!
@@bertvereenooghe8162 Thank you for your reply. The objective is to get the comb attached to the frame. Stretched one piece rubber encourages bees not to attach the comb to the frame. When the rubber is severed the comb will fall on the adjacent frames. String on the other hand will remain attached even as the bees remove one side. When rubber gives way it does so all the way around. Bees find the weaker spots on rubber that are amenable to a proboscis probe and make holes. It gets cut as the surroundings, frame and comb are stabilized. Tensioned rubber is never stabilized and bees will utilize it as a permanency and abandon its removal and leave the comb alone. The rubber will eventually break and the bees will pull the comb into an affixed, stable place wherever it has landed. Before the string is completely severed the comb is attached to the frame. Bees are very capable engineers and will adapt to whatever humans throw at them. Rubber or string. I think that rubber is just a beekeeper utilitarian convenience without thought to the honeybee behavior. String requires a little more effort initially, but the end result is the answer. The likelihood of the comb being attached to the frame is much better.
This guy gives me major Australian Mr. Bean vibes and I love him for it
When he takes off his clothes and runs around naked with the bees he will be a true manifestation of MR BEAN🙄🥸🙃
I like watching your VIDEOS ABOUT BEES
Please make an update on the boot bees.
Phew! How hot were you feeling in that suit! Nice work removing that hive.
Love the content, the framing and composition of the shots. It's lovely to watch and the sound is great. It's one of the reason its a joy to watch this channel. ❤️
John does an awesome job but frankly I would be entertained by Mark even if it was amateur super 8 stuff.
Thank you so much for both of your kind word 😊
That was a lot of fun, those bees were way chilled out, true survivors.Thanks for sharing the video, really enjoyed that! stay safe!
I love that Aussies & Brits call car trunks/ truck beds "the boot" of the car! Hello from America from fellow bee lover ♥️🐝
We mainly call the front the bonnet, not always the hood.
Awesome rescue thanks for sharing. Love watching your videos and of course more so the bees 🐝 🐝🐝👍👍🐝🐝🐝🍯
Great job! Did you find the queen? Did the new queen hatch?
Great video it’s very entertaining.
Merry Christmas to you both and another awesome vid boys.
I love your merch
That was a very enjoyable video. I watch a handful of TH-cam Bee Keeper channels, and I really enjoyed how you carefully explained every step of the operation. Well done. I have been subscribed already and I'm always happy to see one of your videos pop up. Keep up the good work and Merry Christmas to you and yours as well as the rest of your production crew. Take care and, as always, Semper Fi.
Please let us know what happen to this colony!
Thats a great colony of bee's. 👍🐝
Your the funniest youtuber
My mechanic Dad had a vehicle stored in the back yard that looked like that one. A Packard maybe? That was 60 years ago, in Albuquerque, NM. Hot and dry like the area U R in.
I get so invested in these hives? How Are they doing 😆
🐝Oh shoot how fun. They must have wanted to go for a drive.💨
Very cool!
Let us know how the queen turn out.
Nothing like a good cutout to get the blood pumping!
Is it true bees travel 5k everyday to get to its destination and back
Dont start with petrol tank bees, you have enough to answer too with fridges & bees lol
I have a question
Looks like that car is powered by Bee Pee.
Why not put hive on a sheet then shake the bees infront of hive?
Hi , I was wondering if you ship overseas?
Try to use a hive box with a removable bottom. Put the box on top of the fuel tank with the bottom removed and the bees will all move up into it. If the new hive and old hive are separate, they'll stick around.
Twas a gas that one eh! 🤣
Golden Fleece bees is a good name from the age of that car
BP Fuel Bees?
I hate getting stung on the hands doing a cutout. BUT!!! I have finally found a great pair of gloves that don't clag up with honey. My expensive bee gloves tend to distort and clag up. If interested I can send a photo and where to get them.
its a " Standard Vanguard Spacemaster " , I think, they had a Massey Ferguson tractor engine in them
I thought it was the other way around...
Its a deserted car in a deserted area so why ?
27:12
Using rubber bands is asking for more work. The bees perceive the rubber as a permanent fixture and will latently begin to affix the comb to the frame. The first thing you should have done
was set the front edge of the bottom board to the edge of the tank. The bees would have marched in with little or no encouragement. What you should have used is three pound tinsel strength
string with the frayed edges. It is strong enough to hold the comb in place and light enough for the bees to remove as they attach the comb. This was my first time watching you and you are
very entertaining, I hope you don't run into many hybrid bees or else you are in real trouble.
He used string at first, moved to rubber bands on a tip. The bees chew them to pieces and throw them out. The comb gets fixed to the frames. It's in a lot of the previous episodes, which are just as entertaining!
@@bertvereenooghe8162 Thank you for your reply. The objective is to get the comb attached to the frame. Stretched one piece rubber encourages bees not to attach the comb to
the frame. When the rubber is severed the comb will fall on the adjacent frames. String on the other hand will remain attached even as the bees remove one side. When rubber gives way it does so all the way around. Bees find the weaker spots on rubber that are amenable to a proboscis probe and make holes. It gets cut as the surroundings, frame and
comb are stabilized. Tensioned rubber is never stabilized and bees will utilize it as a permanency and abandon its removal and leave the comb alone. The rubber will eventually
break and the bees will pull the comb into an affixed, stable place wherever it has landed. Before the string is completely severed the comb is attached to the frame. Bees are very capable engineers and will adapt to whatever humans throw at them. Rubber or string. I think that rubber is just a beekeeper utilitarian convenience without thought to the
honeybee behavior. String requires a little more effort initially, but the end result is the answer. The likelihood of the comb being attached to the frame is much better.
There a fugue cage
call it Guzzolene, in memory of Hugh Keays-Byrne
damn I totally forgot pops did this shit with no gloves!
Why does he change into Kermit the frog every now and then lol
NOO! ..hoped that helped
Put rubber bands on your wrist before moving hive so you dont have fish them out of your pocket with gooey hands!
You can’t open it s
Can’t open s
They making a bridge from the fuel tank to the hive
Lucky no snakes made a home under the car.
Fuel gage
Funny
Is it
Your carpet not as dirty
Ha
Bridge
I hate how jolly this guy is 🤬🤬🤬
S
I pmu you on your Facebook account
Hate sun
Dirty
Ss
S
S
S
S