It would be nice to also use temperature units that the rest of the world uses so converting the temp is not necessary. Its 2-3 degrees Celsius if anyone was wondering.
Many thanks for the video/advice You have shown me lots more information here that I have picked up from other videos on RUclips 👍 Blessings from Manchester England 🐝🐝
suggestion, when cracking bamboo, try using vice grips instead, you can set how far they close so you don't crush the bamboo tubes completely. Also could you sterilize the wood trays in an oven?
I don't see why you couldn't do the trays in the oven. Not plastic trays obviously, but I think wood trays, at 200 degrees for 3-4 hours would do the job.
I only started with these block type "hotels" after seeing them on here. They are crazy expensive here in Europe so I made a few myself. They are so much better now I'm somewhat wiser on the several pests. I'm going to slowly change all my bamboo hotels. Thanks for the informative video!
In the wild their nesting sites are camouflaged and harder for Houdini fly and mono wasps to find. When you set out a bee hotel it provides easy access to predators which is why it’s important to harvest and clean every year.
@@RentMasonBees It seems like creating and enhancing nesting habitats for solitary bees would be a better solution than selling these products that have a million ways to harm the native populations if you don't do everything correctly.
@@RentMasonBees If you read the literature on this, most bee biologists and conservationists agree that bee hotels are inaffective as a conservation tool and likely commit more harm than good. Even in this video, so many of the larva that were laid were unviable due to the bee hotel welcoming pests that otherwise wouldn't have been able to access them as easily if they were nesting in the natural environment. That has a negative effect on the species overall reproductive outcome and success for the season.
@@jodiejodiejodie many people host mason bees for increased pollination in their yards and to increase bee populations that are on the decline due to over development and chemicals being used in yards. If bee hotels are managed properly 1) clean nesting material put out every spring 2) removed end of spring to protect from predators 3) clean in the fall. Then they can actually help solitary bee populations. The education is in the millions of bee hotels that are sold all over the world that have no instructions on how to properly care for their bees. Everyone wants to help bees by providing a bee hotel for them, but you're right..if not properly maintained it will turn into a predator habitat and cause more harm than good.
Ah... yes.. good eye and a good catch. I should have removed those, but didn't catch that until after the video was already recorded and edited. Once I post this on RUclips, I can't edit the video. Good job catching those other amber ones. Thank you for watching.
@RentMasonBees thanks! I did it for 2 hours today inside where it is warmer but does that matter? Also I cant put them ina fridge so i keep the cocoons outside in a cardboard box the entire winter and fall with small ventilation holes and a big hole closed until march is that fine for the cocoons?
Thank you for this very complete instructional video! I've really enjoyed renting bees from you and also helping the straggler bees emerge from their cocoons (baby bee faces- so cute!). I have only one question- as someone thinking of cleaning at home is it truly necessary to candle the cocoons for non viable bees? Do those non viable bees harbor disease? What if I put out the cocoons (in the spring) after the cleaning/drying/proper storage phase, then at the end of their emergence simply toss the rest of the cocoons? I can understand how removing non viable bees is important for your business of supplying cocoons but am wondering if it's truly important for a home hobbyist?
Yes. The non-viable bees could contain parasites and viruses that could harm other bees. If flashlight candling takes too long, you can put a flashlight at the bottom or a bucket with paper towel covering the hole and spread more cocoons out. You could make a similar light table like ours, but smaller scale.
Another thing is Mason bees find every hole to lay eggs in each year my pond vacuum was covered in nests they also find holes in nature that don’t get cleaned so it looks like you are killing off the year of offspring doing this. I’ve had my system for twenty years until I moved.
Yes. They will find natural holes in your habitat, and those are hard for predators to find. If you have a mason bee house set out, you're also making it easier for predators, so you need to 1) Put clean nesting material out every spring 2) Remove at the end of spring and don't keep out year round and 3) Open nesting material and clean to remove the predators. The nest generation of bees are not harmed during this process and you're actually helping that next generation emerge safely. Here is another video to watch to learn more: ruclips.net/video/7JLquOZdtwU/видео.htmlsi=fII3ACXtudK_WxLa
@@janettgonzalez3735 at the end of spring you can remove nesting material and place in cool garage or shed to protect them from predators. Here’s a video on how to ruclips.net/video/ReJmfnISTZQ/видео.htmlsi=uUTYbjF-Qqb2040g
@@janettgonzalez3735 if curious here’s the new video we just did on what your baby bees are doing at end of July. ruclips.net/video/BHZxOQAYl6E/видео.htmlsi=nhaneoQ1ADKCX9-y
If you have a mason bee house out, they will emerge when temps are 55+ degrees. They only live 6-8 weeks, so once they are done flying, you can remove their bee house and store in cool garage or shed to protect them from summer predators. Then you can harvest and clean them in October/November to get them ready to release the following spring.
Mason bees should be done soon. If you aren’t seeing anymore activity you can carefully remove them and store over summer. Here’s a video on preventing birds. ruclips.net/video/D3BAPbUh9jo/видео.htmlsi=U5IS3ZZU8Ubos_p7
You don’t want warm water just your basic cold tap water. You also want to harvest outside in the fall on a cool day. Remember they’ll start to emerge when temps are 50+.
Steps for raising your own mason bees: 1. Place clean nesting material out in spring. Use nesting material that can easily be opened: stacking trays or cardboard tubes you can unravel 2. Provide clean mud source and make sure to not use slug bait or chemicals that can contaminate soil/mud 3. Gently remove nesting material at the end of spring and store in cool garage or shed. Mason bees only live 6-8 weeks and then they are done. Protect developing larvae from summer predators. How to store over summer video ruclips.net/video/ReJmfnISTZQ/видео.htmlsi=un4m7LkJcPbjAm0x 4. In the fall, once they’ve spun their silk cocoons, open all the nesting material and remove cocoons from predators and clean. Then store in hibernation in fridge over winter. How to clean & store video ruclips.net/video/9_1WlEDTyhk/видео.htmlsi=zyFd7QYYk8lxtDV
Aren’t you killing new bee’s when you do this each year.. I find putting new nests out each year and removing the old nest after they hatch works better without killing the bee.
You do not harm the bees during this process. What harms the bees are the predators that linger in the nesting material and kill the developing larvae. Please watch this video to learn more: ruclips.net/video/7JLquOZdtwU/видео.htmlsi=fII3ACXtudK_WxLa
Excellent! Huge thanks to you for taking the time to produce and post this video 🙏
@@soil-aint-dirt4903 thank you for watching and taking care of your bees
I use also a cedar block drill holes the size of my straw’s and insert them in the holes when it’s time for them too hatch.
Yes. That is a great solution if you can open the straws and clean everything in the fall.
👍⚾️well done & very informative. Thx you !😊🐝
It would be nice to also use temperature units that the rest of the world uses so converting the temp is not necessary. Its 2-3 degrees Celsius if anyone was wondering.
Thank you!very interesting learned a lot.a lot of work like honey bees.
I use a dental took to pull out the white tube from the cardboard sleeve so that I can slide a new, clean white tube in.
Thanks for all the great information
Glad to help. Thank you for watching and caring for your mason bees.
Many thanks for the video/advice You have shown me lots more information here that I have picked up from other videos on RUclips 👍 Blessings from Manchester England 🐝🐝
Thank you for finding us to learn more about how to care for solitary bees. Happy Pollinating!!
Really great information.
suggestion, when cracking bamboo, try using vice grips instead, you can set how far they close so you don't crush the bamboo tubes completely. Also could you sterilize the wood trays in an oven?
I don't see why you couldn't do the trays in the oven. Not plastic trays obviously, but I think wood trays, at 200 degrees for 3-4 hours would do the job.
I only started with these block type "hotels" after seeing them on here. They are crazy expensive here in Europe so I made a few myself. They are so much better now I'm somewhat wiser on the several pests. I'm going to slowly change all my bamboo hotels.
Thanks for the informative video!
Your bees and habitat will be so much healthier. Thank you for learning from our videos and making a change. Bee love!!!
GREAT info . . . lots to remember. Thanks for sharing.
How do they ever survive in the wild without people washing and cleaning the bees and hives?
In the wild their nesting sites are camouflaged and harder for Houdini fly and mono wasps to find. When you set out a bee hotel it provides easy access to predators which is why it’s important to harvest and clean every year.
@@RentMasonBees It seems like creating and enhancing nesting habitats for solitary bees would be a better solution than selling these products that have a million ways to harm the native populations if you don't do everything correctly.
@@RentMasonBees If you read the literature on this, most bee biologists and conservationists agree that bee hotels are inaffective as a conservation tool and likely commit more harm than good. Even in this video, so many of the larva that were laid were unviable due to the bee hotel welcoming pests that otherwise wouldn't have been able to access them as easily if they were nesting in the natural environment. That has a negative effect on the species overall reproductive outcome and success for the season.
@@jodiejodiejodie many people host mason bees for increased pollination in their yards and to increase bee populations that are on the decline due to over development and chemicals being used in yards. If bee hotels are managed properly 1) clean nesting material put out every spring 2) removed end of spring to protect from predators 3) clean in the fall. Then they can actually help solitary bee populations. The education is in the millions of bee hotels that are sold all over the world that have no instructions on how to properly care for their bees. Everyone wants to help bees by providing a bee hotel for them, but you're right..if not properly maintained it will turn into a predator habitat and cause more harm than good.
Do you need a flame? Have you ever tried using a heat gun on high to sterilize the trays?
29:27 There's clearly more amber cocoons right as you say everything else is good. I'm confused why those got the green light.
Ah... yes.. good eye and a good catch. I should have removed those, but didn't catch that until after the video was already recorded and edited. Once I post this on RUclips, I can't edit the video. Good job catching those other amber ones. Thank you for watching.
This was SO helpful!!! Thank you!!
Thank you. I"m glad you enjoyed it and learned something. Please check out our other educational videos that will guide you with solitary bee hosting.
Can i also wash them in january or february?
@@Beecrafter1234 yes in winter is fine too. Make sure you do it outside. Any temperature change to warmer will wake them from hibernation.
@RentMasonBees thanks! I did it for 2 hours today inside where it is warmer but does that matter? Also I cant put them ina fridge so i keep the cocoons outside in a cardboard box the entire winter and fall with small ventilation holes and a big hole closed until march is that fine for the cocoons?
Can you show a close up pic of good and bad cacoons?
Do you mean clean vs. unclean or when they're candled, and you can see through the cocoon?
smart works
Thank you for this very complete instructional video! I've really enjoyed renting bees from you and also helping the straggler bees emerge from their cocoons (baby bee faces- so cute!). I have only one question- as someone thinking of cleaning at home is it truly necessary to candle the cocoons for non viable bees? Do those non viable bees harbor disease? What if I put out the cocoons (in the spring) after the cleaning/drying/proper storage phase, then at the end of their emergence simply toss the rest of the cocoons?
I can understand how removing non viable bees is important for your business of supplying cocoons but am wondering if it's truly important for a home hobbyist?
Yes. The non-viable bees could contain parasites and viruses that could harm other bees. If flashlight candling takes too long, you can put a flashlight at the bottom or a bucket with paper towel covering the hole and spread more cocoons out. You could make a similar light table like ours, but smaller scale.
Another thing is Mason bees find every hole to lay eggs in each year my pond vacuum was covered in nests they also find holes in nature that don’t get cleaned so it looks like you are killing off the year of offspring doing this. I’ve had my system for twenty years until I moved.
Yes. They will find natural holes in your habitat, and those are hard for predators to find. If you have a mason bee house set out, you're also making it easier for predators, so you need to 1) Put clean nesting material out every spring 2) Remove at the end of spring and don't keep out year round and 3) Open nesting material and clean to remove the predators. The nest generation of bees are not harmed during this process and you're actually helping that next generation emerge safely. Here is another video to watch to learn more: ruclips.net/video/7JLquOZdtwU/видео.htmlsi=fII3ACXtudK_WxLa
I use vinegar my house water has chlorine in it so adding more bleach can be too much.
Amazing video. Just a question: If I found them in August, summer time. How can I protect the baby bees from predators?
@@janettgonzalez3735 at the end of spring you can remove nesting material and place in cool garage or shed to protect them from predators. Here’s a video on how to
ruclips.net/video/ReJmfnISTZQ/видео.htmlsi=uUTYbjF-Qqb2040g
@@janettgonzalez3735 if curious here’s the new video we just did on what your baby bees are doing at end of July. ruclips.net/video/BHZxOQAYl6E/видео.htmlsi=nhaneoQ1ADKCX9-y
Looked like a table spoon, not a teaspoon?
I live in florida and don't really have a winter, but I know we have mason and leafcutter bees here. What do you do if you don't have a cold season?
If you have a mason bee house out, they will emerge when temps are 55+ degrees. They only live 6-8 weeks, so once they are done flying, you can remove their bee house and store in cool garage or shed to protect them from summer predators. Then you can harvest and clean them in October/November to get them ready to release the following spring.
Birds are attacking my hotels, is it too soon to save my cocoons for next spring??
Mason bees should be done soon. If you aren’t seeing anymore activity you can carefully remove them and store over summer. Here’s a video on preventing birds. ruclips.net/video/D3BAPbUh9jo/видео.htmlsi=U5IS3ZZU8Ubos_p7
Does water temp mater? It’s fairly cold November, should water be somewhat cool to eliminate thermal cycle?
You don’t want warm water just your basic cold tap water. You also want to harvest outside in the fall on a cool day. Remember they’ll start to emerge when temps are 50+.
What is a list of proper nesting material?
Steps for raising your own mason bees:
1. Place clean nesting material out in spring. Use nesting material that can easily be opened: stacking trays or cardboard tubes you can unravel
2. Provide clean mud source and make sure to not use slug bait or chemicals that can contaminate soil/mud
3. Gently remove nesting material at the end of spring and store in cool garage or shed. Mason bees only live 6-8 weeks and then they are done. Protect developing larvae from summer predators. How to store over summer video ruclips.net/video/ReJmfnISTZQ/видео.htmlsi=un4m7LkJcPbjAm0x
4. In the fall, once they’ve spun their silk cocoons, open all the nesting material and remove cocoons from predators and clean. Then store in hibernation in fridge over winter. How to clean & store video ruclips.net/video/9_1WlEDTyhk/видео.htmlsi=zyFd7QYYk8lxtDV
What time of year are you doing this? So the cocoons are hatched in spring..cleaning the tubes in October?
Harvest in the fall. We do all of ours in October.
@@RentMasonBeescan I hang filled tubes in netting outdoors until the fall?
@@pozzee2809 yes you can protect them with a fine mesh netting so that mono wasps or birds can't get to them.
Thanks for the video! Is it possible to use vinegar, alcohol or something more eco-friendly than bleach?
We haven't tried other solutions, but they may work. We just know the bleach eliminates the pollen mites and chalkbrood, so that is the key.
Not sure if anyone else is having an issue, but I'm not getting any sound with this video.
I can hear the audio
Aren’t you killing new bee’s when you do this each year.. I find putting new nests out each year and removing the old nest after they hatch works better without killing the bee.
You do not harm the bees during this process. What harms the bees are the predators that linger in the nesting material and kill the developing larvae. Please watch this video to learn more: ruclips.net/video/7JLquOZdtwU/видео.htmlsi=fII3ACXtudK_WxLa