Hello Deep Look fans! I produced this episode. Thank you for watching! A few of you have asked how adult blue orchard bees get out of the nest. Jim Cane, a native bee ecologist at the US Department of Agriculture, explained that adults chew their way out of their tough cocoon and then keep on chewing to pass through the mud partitions and ultimately the mud closure of the nest. Like all bees, the female blue orchard bee gets to choose the sex of each offspring - fertilized eggs become females; unfertilized eggs become males. She puts female eggs at the back of the nest and males at the front. Most females mate only once, so males that are late to the game will have fewer offspring. That’s why adult males of all solitary bees emerge a few days to a week before the females. An emerged bee will be patient and wait for a few days for the next in line to exit. If its sibling doesn’t emerge because it has died, the bee will eat through its sibling’s cocoon and keep going. Thanks for your questions! -Gabriela
Thank you for your explanation! That's very considerate of the bee to wait for its siblings. And their mother planned so well that she will have a lot of grandchildren both from her daughters and sons.
Haha. I was reading that word for word when it came on the video. That was a funny coincidence. I love it when that happens. It is a really cute way of saying. I can't think of a better way to have put it. 😊
*bees are a noble insect and have been respected & revered by civilizations for thousands of years. without them we would lose 70% of our food supply. we owe so much to these hard workers and should do everything we can to protect them.*
@@hellmo6087 not bees uselly, but the artifically made one (artificial= man made) the killer bee is, normal bees are just nice hard workers. wasp on the other hand.
Agreed but a small correction, you are anthropomorphizing their behavior. Bees, as all insects, act on specific genetically pre programmed behaviors,most being reactions to internal and external stimuli. They lack the capability to be "hard working" and "noble". It's best to comprehend how and why they act the way they do and avoid anthropomorphizing them because only then can we act in the correct way to protect them.
@@tourmelion9221 true, some places lack bees to begin with such as Canada or Russia (their pollinators are male mosquitoes... females also eat nectar and pollinate... but only if they cant find a source of blood)
Truly. Next time a bee is in your presence try really hard to stay calm and just observe. You will bee surprised that they don't chase you or sting you. They are looking for water or pollen and are not interested in you at all. Once you understand this you won't have that fear.
I'm probably not as scared, but I never panic when one is around. When one lands on my hand, though, I go into a slight panic. But nonetheless, I respect honeybees and how much they do for Earth. :3
th-cam.com/video/t39zfZLqpgU/w-d-xo.html Here's a video I took of another bee (possibly an eastern blueberry bee?) cleaning herself. They're fascinating little creatures! (I'm not trying to self-promote, I just love bees)
I know this is 2 years old but I'm going to comment anyway I really like how they add the sound effects of the bee putting the mud in her nest and other sound effects they really pay attention to detail and it make me feel more like I've shrunken down to the bee size to watch lol🤭
Bee larva: knows exactly that it has food given by its mother and starts eating Human baby: screaming for 3 hours after being born and takes a year to figure out it can think
I don't quite know why, but I find bees to be one of the most adorable creatures out there. Super cute! Thanks for another Deep Look into the lives of these amazing little insects!
Chubby_ Muchi NO WONDER MY COUSIN GOT STINGED FROM A FLY(I cant spell )
5 ปีที่แล้ว +7
The easiest way to tell if it's a bee or a fly is to look at the antennae. Bees and wasps have long antennae while flies have short and stubby ones. The name "hornet" comes from the antennae looking like the horns on a goat. :) Compare the long antennae on this honey bee: www.flickr.com/photos/tinyturtle/46233795064/ to the short ones on this hoverfly: www.flickr.com/photos/tinyturtle/46233794854/
Hi Blou Bear. I produced this episode of Deep Look. In this behind-the-scenes video you can get an idea of the camera gear our cinematographer and lead producer Josh Cassidy uses: th-cam.com/video/svpP4HdsNI8/w-d-xo.html Enjoy! --Gabriela
Hi Blou Bear. I produced this episode of Deep Look. In this behind-the-scenes video you can get an idea of the camera gear our cinematographer and lead producer Josh Cassidy uses: th-cam.com/video/svpP4HdsNI8/w-d-xo.html Enjoy! --Gabriela
they put bigger lumps of food near the end, so that the nearest-to-exit larvae finish first and leave the entrance free for the ones down below who are slower? ...or how does it make sure the larvae don't block each other inside?
I don't think the bees put bigger lumps of food near the end on purpose, it was probably just coincidence. When the larvae grow into adults they can dig through the mud and get out.
the bee can choose the gender of the eggs. the male eggs are born faster than female eggs, so the bee lays female eggs in the back and male eggs closer to the entrance.
Yea I know, without beez pollin can't reach other flowers to make seeds, no seeds no plants, no plants no oxygen, no oxygen no life. Am I right? I didn't google it this is my guess
Few people know about these bees. This video is so beautiful and educational it is helping to raise awareness. Honey bees get attention because they provide honey and we can control them. If you have one queen there are 25,000 bees following you to the orchard, with solitary native bees you have to provide flowers, water and shelter to get them to stay in the garden and pollinate your crops.
Another fun fact is that honey bees should be considered an invasive species. The actually come from Europe and they are harming our native pollinators. If we let nature do its thing, most honey bees would die out in the U.S.A. But we don't consider them invasive because, we like honey, lip balm and candles. Stuff like that. Not necessarily good nor bad. But it's a strange thought to say the least.
This caught my attention. I am more of a physics guy and the way those bees flap their wings is so awesome! They seem to flapping laterally and not rotationally! Or is the rotation of the wing too fast for the unaided eye? Its amazing how flimsy their wings are compared to their body and its hard to believe the bees don't get their wings chopped off in the wild! And its so amazing how they flap them so fast like a machine as if an engine storing elastic potential energy and releasing it in quick successions! And this bee in particular is also an architect! What's even more cool is that the bee doesn't even know that its doing what its doing! Off I go to catch bees.
Hey there - bee flight is indeed fascinating. Our good friends at BioGraphic produced a wonderful short called "Bumper Bees" that explores their resiliency and durability: th-cam.com/video/kyXlHeBsA6k/w-d-xo.html
I wonder how the bee compensates when it has a mandible full of mud about the same size as its head. That has to make the flight pattern more nose heavy.
After several times watching the videos in Deep Look, I think the videos can make good educational videos for kids. Parents can watch them with their kids & get knowledge about the tiny world together. Or aunts & uncles with their young nephews & nieces. Enough solitary time with your own electronic devices, just spend time together with the young ones with this kind of inspirational videos.
She emerged from her cocoon just knowing how, like we just know how to fall in love, how to chew and swallow food, how to run from danger and jump, how to withdraw socially when we get a short term virus, how to cry, how to hide, how to scream when in peril. Many things are inborn and genetic, and it's fascinating. Some things do have to be taught: cultural behaviours like clapping, language, play a musical instrument, make a stone tool, it's really interesting to think about which things we learned to do and which things we just do :-)
We have them in Australia too, a lot of people spray them thinking they’re blowflies :( lots of carpenter bees out there (mason bees as you Americans say)
Try find a thick piece of soft wood ( Like a log ). Attach it somewhere in your backyard, preferably on the sunnier side and then add a rain protecting roof. It might just choose that rather than your Fascia Boards and Outdoor decking.
The way she talks and the way she makes her videos are just so interesting it’s like I want to watch it and at the same time I’m getting educated! Love your videos!!!💙💙💙
I always found it amazing how most insects are born just knowing their role and what to do. They dont usually have to be taught or shown anything like a lot of mammals do their offspring.
Hello Deep Look fans! I produced this episode. Thank you for watching! A few of you have asked how adult blue orchard bees get out of the nest. Jim Cane, a native bee ecologist at the US Department of Agriculture, explained that adults chew their way out of their tough cocoon and then keep on chewing to pass through the mud partitions and ultimately the mud closure of the nest. Like all bees, the female blue orchard bee gets to choose the sex of each offspring - fertilized eggs become females; unfertilized eggs become males. She puts female eggs at the back of the nest and males at the front. Most females mate only once, so males that are late to the game will have fewer offspring. That’s why adult males of all solitary bees emerge a few days to a week before the females. An emerged bee will be patient and wait for a few days for the next in line to exit. If its sibling doesn’t emerge because it has died, the bee will eat through its sibling’s cocoon and keep going. Thanks for your questions! -Gabriela
ye
Thank you for your explanation! That's very considerate of the bee to wait for its siblings. And their mother planned so well that she will have a lot of grandchildren both from her daughters and sons.
Back Bee: "Yo dude, you're done?"
Front Bee: "Patient, dude. I'm waiting too."
Back Bee: "Oh, ok."
So a bee will wait in its partition until next partition is empty right? But how a bee will know that next partition is empty behind the wall?
Another great video!Good job!!Do you mind sharing the camera info that you used for close imaging? Thanks!
Honestly the purple pollen balls look really delicious
ShroomWalrus I know right, it looks exactly like "ube"
NuclearDucky pinoy eh?
ShroomWalrus
I know, right? The thumbnail made me think of blueberry and chocolate icecream 😎
NuclearDucky im also asking, eh?
It certainly does
“The purple lunch box, their mom packed for them!” That is such an adorable way to say that they eat it.
I love the way she pronounces it haha
Rosielyn_ Ongue I know right
Wholesomeness at the finest
Haha. I was reading that word for word when it came on the video. That was a funny coincidence. I love it when that happens.
It is a really cute way of saying. I can't think of a better way to have put it. 😊
Who would have thought a little wriggly grub looking thing could be in such a cute scenario. And look so cute, in turn! 😍
Honestly would mistake her as a really smart fly
Flies don't have a soft fur-like texture on their bodies.
L5940 I don't think I would pay attention to that as it's flying around me
Flies only have a probiscous .
same
Pari Lemons
Yeah so true
Bee: *"breathes"*
Specialist: *Write that down, write that down.*
Mauro Molinero they do?
@@brickyy3106 why do you think we know insects breath oxigen? Someone figured it out and wrote it down
Mauro Molinero woah I never knew that
I mean yeah thats how it works basically lol
They write down whatever they see. That is called observation.
*bees are a noble insect and have been respected & revered by civilizations for thousands of years. without them we would lose 70% of our food supply. we owe so much to these hard workers and should do everything we can to protect them.*
Yet when one flies nears you its like hell's upon you
Even more when you see that you're closer to their nest
There are other pollinators
@@hellmo6087 not bees uselly, but the artifically made one (artificial= man made) the killer bee is, normal bees are just nice hard workers. wasp on the other hand.
Agreed but a small correction, you are anthropomorphizing their behavior.
Bees, as all insects, act on specific genetically pre programmed behaviors,most being reactions to internal and external stimuli.
They lack the capability to be "hard working" and "noble".
It's best to comprehend how and why they act the way they do and avoid anthropomorphizing them because only then can we act in the correct way to protect them.
@@tourmelion9221 true, some places lack bees to begin with such as Canada or Russia (their pollinators are male mosquitoes... females also eat nectar and pollinate... but only if they cant find a source of blood)
I'm really scared of bees, like REALLY scared, but I respect them so much. They do a lot of good to the Earth.
@Almighty Sagittarius killer bees?! They are what my nightmares are made of
Truly. Next time a bee is in your presence try really hard to stay calm and just observe. You will bee surprised that they don't chase you or sting you. They are looking for water or pollen and are not interested in you at all. Once you understand this you won't have that fear.
Killer bees and parasitic wasps can go extinct,idc.
It’s best to stand around and let the bees do their things, I always just wait for them to be out of my presence so I can do my own thing.
I'm probably not as scared, but I never panic when one is around. When one lands on my hand, though, I go into a slight panic. But nonetheless, I respect honeybees and how much they do for Earth. :3
2:26 it’s so cute how she cleans her face 🥺
Ikr 😊
IKRRR 💜💜
yeah.... *gets beezlebub flashbacks* cute
w-what...
th-cam.com/video/t39zfZLqpgU/w-d-xo.html
Here's a video I took of another bee (possibly an eastern blueberry bee?) cleaning herself. They're fascinating little creatures! (I'm not trying to self-promote, I just love bees)
Blue orchard larva: Oooh, candy for lunch!
Wasp larva: (makes xenomorph noises as it digs into the organs of a cockroach)
Chicken Draws Dogs sksks you’re so underrated
Lol
metal
does anybody think about the possibility of those purple things out on the shelves of our stores? it sounds delicious.
@@theshadowslullaby4265 idk, but a close analog to that ball of concentrated nectar is ube which is purple yam
I know this is 2 years old but I'm going to comment anyway I really like how they add the sound effects of the bee putting the mud in her nest and other sound effects they really pay attention to detail and it make me feel more like I've shrunken down to the bee size to watch lol🤭
Nice
It is cool AND creepy, lol
Agreed! Bee n insect ASMR is the only type I f/w :D!
Five seconds in and im already in love with this creature
Sammmeeeee
SAMMMEEEEEE
H00MAN - ...
😅👋
Did anyone else go “Aww” when she said “The little purple lunchbox their mother made for them”
I did
I LOVE YOUR PROFILE PIC AAAAA
Your mom
MEEEE
I did
she protecc
she attacc
but most importantly
*HER BABIES EAT LUNCH SHE PACC*
Sounds so wholesome~
creeper? awe man.
This joke is getting old
This is old STOP taking it seriously
And viral
@@aez8 true
Looks like ube and chocolate ice cream
Yes hahaha 😂
Right? Now I’m craving 😍😍 sarap
Or akafuku mochi
That’s why I clicked on this lol
No
I thought the purple stuff was ube ice cream
Bro are you a filipino?
@@pauladriannemojal749 pilipino rin ako
@@miickii2441 Hindi ka nag-iisa XD
Taena tagglish
Omg I did too lol
She’s a tireless working mamma! Amazing the work these little wonderful creatures do from building there home by themselves to pollinating everything.
I love bees! ( ・ω・)ノ
I love how u used the phrase “the purple lunch box their mom packed for them!” That was so cuteee
Bees are arguably one of the best and most amazing insects.
I agree.I do like them but I’m scared of them because at least roaches don’t sting
•l ockshi • i cried a little when she said that :’)
me too :3
Aww
The visuals are honestly incredible
I love bees, never knew about these blue beauties though. Thanks Deep Look ❤.
You are most welcome.
They are blue?
I f they dont have stings, i will love them very much T T)
But i dont kill them.
Bee larva: knows exactly that it has food given by its mother and starts eating
Human baby: screaming for 3 hours after being born and takes a year to figure out it can think
Humans live so much longer than bees though so maybe it's all to-a-scale.
How would they get the food even if they knew it was there? You aren't much of a thinker are u?
@@antoniobutler4239 like how the larva got it
Me
@@Zombie_Candyman if im right ur a creepypasta fan?
Solitary bees? Purple pollen? Even as a long time insect fan, I learn new things from this channel!
I was today years old when I realized there are solitary bees. Thanks DL!
I don't quite know why, but I find bees to be one of the most adorable creatures out there. Super cute! Thanks for another Deep Look into the lives of these amazing little insects!
You give insects “human” like qualities. Hopefully like me, it makes many empathize with their plight & respect their existence....
Insects don’t respect my existence so I won’t respect theirs
@@tuscansun2320 Sir, you're thinking about wasps, scourge of bees and people alike
Fun fact: insects and animal is a term for “monsters” we literally degrade each other by insulting animals that have survived at all odds
“The purple lunchbox their mom packed for them.”
Me: Aww
*slightly throwing up at the sight of larvae* 🥰
Awe
Why? What's so horrible about larvae dear?
I would have thought that was a fly rather than a bee 😅😅
Until it stung you :)
Well they look the same ....the only difference it's the colour ....and the number of baby's and that are solitary
This things are in our school.
(I think)
Always break there nests
Chubby_ Muchi NO WONDER MY COUSIN GOT STINGED FROM A FLY(I cant spell )
The easiest way to tell if it's a bee or a fly is to look at the antennae. Bees and wasps have long antennae while flies have short and stubby ones. The name "hornet" comes from the antennae looking like the horns on a goat. :)
Compare the long antennae on this honey bee: www.flickr.com/photos/tinyturtle/46233795064/
to the short ones on this hoverfly: www.flickr.com/photos/tinyturtle/46233794854/
4:05 I love how they just sorta bump into each other like “Oh sorry, excuse me,” and the one on the flower sticks its leggies out like “UGH STOP”
Ive seen this in my frontyard when i was 6 and remember me saying "wow they're big!" But i didnt know it was a blue bee.
That's what she said
@@chomper1469 wow way to make a wholesome comment not wholesome
At first, i thought i saw ice cream. Ice cream brought me here.
Come for the ice cream, stay for the science.
😂
🤣🤣🤣
Patrick: " Did somebody said ice cream.
Reads the No Trespassing sign.
Patrick: Ice Cream!!!!!!
same!
This is the "its 1:00 am i should be sleeping and now i like nature" youtube channel
why is this so right
5:22 am and yes, you're absolutely right!
Blu Laza so true 🤣
Gah, try 8:20am and I have been saying, I'll go to sleep after this video, since 12:30am. Blah!!!
3:12 here 😂😂😂 i should be sleeping
"This blue orchard bee is amazing"
Yeah, I know
Turns on captions
"This blue orchard bee is a mason"
Oh 😂😅
GailStorm08 lol 😅
Did somekne say Amazon???
THE NUMBERS MASON
I heard "A mason"
@@samubo206 *WHAT DO THEY MEAN MASON*
4:03
Bee1: eating
Bee2: ATTACK MODE
Bee3: _uno reverse card_
Bee1: *I’m just trying to eat*
Not funny. Didn’t laugh.
That’s how me and my siblings eat
Ha ha ha ha
@@PlayBoX-qq9kr Ikr
I'm dead 🤣
2:46 awe my God, that was so cute! "Little lunchbox mama packed" I'm in love, awe. 🌷😍💓🐝
I don’t know why I’m here, but I’m glad I clicked
RELATABLE!!! 😂
I love your profile pic can you tell the artist
@@oofers17 it's from a cartoon called Steven Universe if im right
@@lookatmyplaylists9848 I ment who's the artist (connie is the best)
It’s so cool to know a bee did that.
They are like little tiny construction workers.
🐝👷♀️
Now I'm imagining them wearing little yellow builders hats. I have to admit, it's a very cute image!
they're a very good builder
I like how bees have more art skills than me ._.
its more instinct than skill
question:
if the bees in the middle hatch from their cocoons first, How do they get out with the others in the way?
They wait for their siblings to hatch. There is a pinned comment on this video now that explains it more in depth :)
They still in the place where they are.
Until all it's siblings had hatched, it crawls out.
Simple enough.
"'It looks like a piece of jewelry"
Me: It looks like an ice cream to me.
2:34
The "me:" here was completely unnecessary... beginning to hate the overuse of the colon memes...
@@anthonysmith1228 Me:
*being serious*
Anthony Smith:
me: no u
ice cream is jewelry
Same I thought it was ice cream in the thumbnail until I read the title of it.
Narrator: "Her material is, you guessed it,"
*Me: Honey.*
Narrator: "...Mud!"
Why would a bee build a nest with honey? It’s like building your house out of bread 😂
It's the taking part that counts. Hahahaha
Lauren A
1 second later......
FUuUuUuuUuUuUuuUUuUuU-
@@rpop7911I'd love to live in a bread house you dont know my life
I'd love a French toast house 🤤
For the longest time I only looked at the thumbnail, this was constantly on my recommendations and I thought it was ice-cream.
The purple pollen balls reminds me of an Filipino ice cream called ube
drink up it’s called ube, the ice cream is ube with a ton of other stuff like milk
@@bongster849 thx
Same here 💜
Actually ube isn't an ice cream it's just ube flavored
But Ube is like a root. Like cassava. Or like Taro. It’s not an ice cream...
I would have never guessed that was a bee
It looked like a house fly lol
me: **sees the bee lay an egg** oh that looks normal.
me again: **later sees how the larva looks like after hatching** .0.
Same with fly and other creatures/insect
steve? awe man.
To be honest, bee larvae is more adorable than maggots
Flying Phoenix Cat *WHY ARE WE STILL HERE? TO SUFFER?*
Marian Jenickah when have maggots ever been adorable
4:06 he was like get away from my girl
I come back and watch this about once a month for the awesome string composition in the background.
Awesome cinematography 👍
Many thanks! That is Josh cassidy.
I wanna see their camera gear
Cause of those great macro shots
Hi Blou Bear. I produced this episode of Deep Look. In this behind-the-scenes video you can get an idea of the camera gear our cinematographer and lead producer Josh Cassidy uses: th-cam.com/video/svpP4HdsNI8/w-d-xo.html Enjoy! --Gabriela
Hi Blou Bear. I produced this episode of Deep Look. In this behind-the-scenes video you can get an idea of the camera gear our cinematographer and lead producer Josh Cassidy uses: th-cam.com/video/svpP4HdsNI8/w-d-xo.html Enjoy! --Gabriela
Just watched it... really great ideas !! Thanks for this link.
somehow this narrator gets me excited about mud bees
This has been in my recommend videos for so long and I have finally watched it. I am not disappointed.
they put bigger lumps of food near the end, so that the nearest-to-exit larvae finish first and leave the entrance free for the ones down below who are slower? ...or how does it make sure the larvae don't block each other inside?
I don't think the bees put bigger lumps of food near the end on purpose, it was probably just coincidence. When the larvae grow into adults they can dig through the mud and get out.
That's exactly my question...a big one for the video to overlook. How does the exit for multiple bees work?
the bee can choose the gender of the eggs. the male eggs are born faster than female eggs, so the bee lays female eggs in the back and male eggs closer to the entrance.
See the pinned comment by Gabriela Quiros for the answer!
I wonder how does they breathe there? Like they are trapped, so how?
Let’s save the bees!
By not smoking and less traffic? :3
Without bees, humans won’t survive. Google it.
Yea I know, without beez pollin can't reach other flowers to make seeds, no seeds no plants, no plants no oxygen, no oxygen no life.
Am I right? I didn't google it this is my guess
Very good, now bees will get ya. ;) Make sure you don’t smoke or cause traffic coz you might scare your bride bee to be ;)
Just hope I don't get stung lol
I thought the thumbnail *was ICE CREAM*
Ube flavored ice cream?
Same I swear😂
With a larve and i was like hmmmm ok that's not right
I bet it taste like flowery grape
“The Purple Lunchbox their mom packed for them.” 😭 😭 It just makes me so happy cause its so cute.
She's an architect bee
I love bee's so much
And I have a very great respect to them 😍😍
pooch yeah me too though I guess there’s a fine line between respecting and fearing and I think I might be on the wrong side...
Wait...There are 4000 types of bees in America alone? Wow!
Well yeah, you act like it’s a small place.
Shaniqua still alot tho
Few people know about these bees. This video is so beautiful and educational it is helping to raise awareness. Honey bees get attention because they provide honey and we can control them. If you have one queen there are 25,000 bees following you to the orchard, with solitary native bees you have to provide flowers, water and shelter to get them to stay in the garden and pollinate your crops.
Another fun fact is that honey bees should be considered an invasive species. The actually come from Europe and they are harming our native pollinators. If we let nature do its thing, most honey bees would die out in the U.S.A.
But we don't consider them invasive because, we like honey, lip balm and candles. Stuff like that. Not necessarily good nor bad. But it's a strange thought to say the least.
notKARTHIK. North America
This caught my attention. I am more of a physics guy and the way those bees flap their wings is so awesome! They seem to flapping laterally and not rotationally! Or is the rotation of the wing too fast for the unaided eye? Its amazing how flimsy their wings are compared to their body and its hard to believe the bees don't get their wings chopped off in the wild! And its so amazing how they flap them so fast like a machine as if an engine storing elastic potential energy and releasing it in quick successions! And this bee in particular is also an architect! What's even more cool is that the bee doesn't even know that its doing what its doing! Off I go to catch bees.
It's a lot like humans walking or riding a bike their are a lot of ideas about how it works, but humans just kind of do it.
The way bees and birds fly is pretty similar, just sped up.
Hey there - bee flight is indeed fascinating. Our good friends at BioGraphic produced a wonderful short called "Bumper Bees" that explores their resiliency and durability: th-cam.com/video/kyXlHeBsA6k/w-d-xo.html
I wonder how the bee compensates when it has a mandible full of mud about the same size as its head. That has to make the flight pattern more nose heavy.
Its actually kinetic energy
I'm so proud of her. What a good Bee mama
0:49 okay that seems fine
0:52 OH DEAR LORD PLEASE NO
SCP-049 lol
SCP-049 Crunchie
🤣🤣
That one spongebob episode be like:
She’s so cute and talented 😭😭😭
That voice is so relaxing
The purple lunch box, their mom packed for them!” That is such an adorable way to say that they eat it.
So when I see those “BIG FLYS” and don’t get freaked out they could be BEES! 🐝 😦
*this channel is so underated and needs more recognition, i swear*
"the purple lunchbox their mom packed for them" has got to be the cutest line 💗😭
That is a lot of pollen. I'm impressed how much they collect.
Thank you for teaching us about these pretty, helpful little bees!
Also, thank you little blue orchard bees for your dedication to the craft!
After several times watching the videos in Deep Look, I think the videos can make good educational videos for kids. Parents can watch them with their kids & get knowledge about the tiny world together. Or aunts & uncles with their young nephews & nieces. Enough solitary time with your own electronic devices, just spend time together with the young ones with this kind of inspirational videos.
Thanks!
@@KQEDDeepLook You're welcome :D
Your channel is so awesome!
pinoys be scrolling down their feed and seeing the thumbnail going:
"is that ube"
3:09
Bee: Yay, I'm free. Um, there is a camera Infront of me. I'll stay here in my shell until they go away
THEY KNOWS
I got a question, when the mother sealed the tube with mud, will the oxygen in the tube be depleted for the babies?
Hafizuddin Nasarudin I'm going to venture that the mud plugs still have enough pore space for air to pass through.
See pinned comment at top of page for answers.
*WHO DARES TO DISLIKE THIS BEAUTY OF NATURE*
The honeybees. They're not happy with the rising competition from their blue orchard cousins XD
Wow. Nature is just wow. And so pretty! God has made this bee the prettiest species of bee ever.
High quality content has arrived
Elerium 69 likes u know what that means
Who else thinks the thumbnail looks like ice cream?
creeper? awe man.
@@flyingphoenixcat3742 what with the 'creeper'?
Me lol
I'm telling you, moms bees are the best😂❤️
0:52 when the camera flips to the forward facing camera
She's good at playing Bejeweled
Beejeweled
Bee-jeweled*
Guy Ender thanks
*🅱️ee-🅱️eweled*
Who though they this was an icecream video before they clicked on this video?
I did. 😆🍦
@ItzUrGurlKateFromYT yeet
I thought it was creeper? awe man.
😋
You need glasses because....
THERE IS AN INSECT
There is an insect-
Wonder who taught her all that? Sista bee sure is smart 😂
She went to college
The one who created her, Allah.
She emerged from her cocoon just knowing how, like we just know how to fall in love, how to chew and swallow food, how to run from danger and jump, how to withdraw socially when we get a short term virus, how to cry, how to hide, how to scream when in peril. Many things are inborn and genetic, and it's fascinating. Some things do have to be taught: cultural behaviours like clapping, language, play a musical instrument, make a stone tool, it's really interesting to think about which things we learned to do and which things we just do :-)
I exactly know this kind of bees. Every springs they come on my windows to make nests. I even can hear one of them while writing this.
"Watch this bee"
Me: Thats a Bee!?
Right, looks like a fly
I am th 69th like of this comment...
We have them in Australia too, a lot of people spray them thinking they’re blowflies :( lots of carpenter bees out there (mason bees as you Americans say)
@@Suchwerewolf hello fellow australian!
When the bee threw his hands up in the air like a Minecraft iron Gollum I giggled and awed
It looks like the Carpenter bee builds a similar nest...Except she tunnels through my nice fascia boards and outdoor decking.
carpenter bees are the only species that carves her own tunnel, the other species of solitary bees look for an abandon beetle hole.
Try find a thick piece of soft wood ( Like a log ). Attach it somewhere in your backyard, preferably on the sunnier side and then add a rain protecting roof. It might just choose that rather than your Fascia Boards and Outdoor decking.
The way she talks and the way she makes her videos are just so interesting it’s like I want to watch it and at the same time I’m getting educated! Love your videos!!!💙💙💙
In the thumbnail I thought it was ice cream 😂
2:16 Listen closely you'll hear ASMR 😂
I lowkey got tingles-
I always found it amazing how most insects are born just knowing their role and what to do. They dont usually have to be taught or shown anything like a lot of mammals do their offspring.
Hi I love this channel so much
Thanks for so many likes😀😀😀
At 0:19 it looks like a fly more than a bee
Like if you agree 👍
Like begger
Amazing
nathan manoj your profile pic made me think that there was a hair on my screen 😂
ikr I totally agree with you .
Thanks to all the animals in the world
"What's this Bee up to digging around in the mud"
It's BEEing positive. 🙃
I love bees! They’re so cute!
Gosh this bee is so hard-working and I’m just in my room all the time doing absolutely nothing...
I HAVE NO IDEA WHY BUT I WATCH THIS VIDEO EVERY TIME POPS TO MY RECOMMENDATION 2-3 TIME A YEAR
Awesome as always and Hope you win the @scienceSMASH Short form film award, you guys deserve it.
All I can say is that their lives are tough.
" if you look closely maybe you'll see a blue Orchard bee" nice joke as soon as I hear buzz buzz I'm out🏃♀️💨
Being a bee would be great, just fly around, licking flowers, making little purple lunch boxes.
Looks like a scene straight out from a disney pixar movie 😍😍😍
No it doesnt
What are you on