If you had followed the hurricane Ian thread you saw "my bees" made it through the storm OK. Well, during clean up after the storm I was trimming trees and got a good look at the situation. The hive was mostly hidden by palm fronds and some Brazilian pepper tree branches. Most people in the building didn't even know they were there.
The bees had been there at least 4 or 5 years that I know of, maybe as long as 7 years. The queen may have come from a hive that was in my soffit about 40ft away. I had a new roof put on the building in '15 and I had some combs to clear out before the roofers could finish up.
So this is what I could see once the trees were trimmed.
People going to the laundry room have to walk under them and the dead tree is leaning on another palm, pushing it over toward the parking lot and into the fence. I couldn't leave them there any more.
I had made calls years ago to have them removed and the people I talked to wanted to charge me $500 and up, AND, they were just going to kill them. Not cool. I left them as long as I could but in the end I had to act.
I bought a cheap bee suit for $50 and some huge plastic bags. My plan was to bag the end of the tree and gas them with C25 from my welding tank.
I was telling a tenant my plans and she was as sad as I was about killing them. A few days ago she posted somewhere that we needed some bees removed with the key term being "Free". She said her messages lit up within a few minutes and had some guys coming out to get them the next day.
They show up and start working on the combs and bees they can collect. They strapped the combs to frames and started the process of creating their new home.
As they got deeper into the project they realized what they were in for. The top half of the tree is totally hollow and its full of combs and bees. They came back the next day to cut the top off and lower it down gently.
They dug through the trunk and found the queen and put her in a nice box to transport her.
As of yesterday evening they had a few boxes out to catch the stragglers. The hive is set up on their farm with the queen in her new home.
So, the bees went to live on a nice farm with lots of other bees to play with. One of the guys estimated the number that came out of my tree at 100,000. I don't know if that is a lot for one hive but they were excited the whole time they were collecting them.