Monday, August 5, 2024

The Bee


This blooming orchid lives, for the time being, in our living room. I used that celery vase, the green one with the face, to prop up its stem because it's the only vase tall enough to keep the flowers from dragging on the windowsill. It's pretty, but the reason I'm posting it is the bee in the upper left of the photo.

That bee has become obsessed with the orchid. (I assume it's only one bee, but I suppose it could be several. I haven't seen more than one at a time.) It flew inside a few days ago and, as I do with all bees that come inside, I got a magazine and gently shooed it out the window. This is not an easy task because the bees often don't cooperate, but I managed. It was back minutes later.

And it's come back every day since, flying in and out on its own. Yesterday I caught it in a drinking glass and took it out to the middle of the back garden, thinking that might be far enough away to keep it out of the house. No! About fifteen minutes later, there it was again.

I have no objection to an infatuated bee courting our orchid. I just don't want it to die in the house, as sometimes happens when insects get trapped in here. But it seems to know what it's doing, so from now on I'm leaving it alone.

I don't remember any insect showing an interest in our orchids before, but apparently bees do pollinate orchids in the wild. So maybe it's just doing its thing. Weirdly, it seems more attached to the leaves than the flowers. I wonder if there are tiny insects on the plant -- scale, maybe -- secreting honeydew and that's attracting the bee.


I took Olga to the cemetery yesterday. It was a very slow walk, but as you can see, she had a lot of fun rolling in the grass. (And I started that video after she'd already been rolling a minute or so, so that's not even her at her most vigorous!)

29 comments:

  1. I once read a study done by children at some school in London on the selection patterns of the bees. If there is still no war here today I will look it up and send you a link.

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  2. Blackawton, P.S. et al. Blackawton bees. Biol. Lett. 7, 168-172 (2011). doi: 10.1098/rsbl.2010.1056

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  3. I wouldn’t breathe easy until I knew for certain that bee was out of the house. I’d ruin the aesthetic by putting screens in the windows. (I would never kill the bee, although it could kill me.) Watching Olga brightened my morning.

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  4. You have a Day of the Dead (sugar skull) ornament :) Love it.
    Love Olga have a great day too. No idea about the bee, I say just let it do its thing.

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  5. A very persistent bee. The music with Olga rolling was funny.

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  6. Shame that Dave didn't put that bee in a small jar and fly him across the Atlantic. Surely then, he would never have got back to the orchid

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  7. Last week during a visit with an elderly neighbour, a retired biologist, I was asked to shoo out a wasp and then another and then help with brushing a few ants back into the garden and so on, all with the verdict, in these times, every insect matters.
    So, well done!

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  8. You can stake up the bloom stalk of an orchid to keep it from falling over. I used to have little clips to hold the stalk to the stake.
    Cheers Peter

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  9. If I weren't worried about bug bites or having to take a shower immediately afterwards, getting naked and rolling in nice tall grass actually sounds invigorating.

    Like mentioned above, my MIL, the orchid whisperer as I sometimes refer to her, uses dowels and small clips to hold up the stalks.

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  10. Olga break dancing! I expect the bee will find a way out once she's done with the orchid. I agree about protecting all insects, even ones we don't like so much.

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  11. I wouldn't want the bee in my house and I'd probably kill myself trying to gently, and then not so gently, shoo it outside.

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  12. can't have open windows here without a screen though I do keep the doors open when the weather permits and no screen doors. oh well, go figure. I occasionally find a bee in the house but more usually, dirt dabbers that think just inside the back door on the ceiling is a great place to build a nest. the orchid is lovely.

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  13. Your yellow flowering orchid is prize winning. Bees are so important and this particular bee is determined to visit your orchid. The fact that the bee seems to have a defined route to get inside to the orchid is surprising. Sweet Olga is one joyful girl.

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  14. Could you put the orchid outside for awhile?
    It's nice to see Olga enjoying herself. She looks so happy!

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  15. You were able to watch this bee long enough and often enough to see a pattern and tell a good story.

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  16. Olga put a smile on my face this morning! The bee saga is fascinating. Something has attracted that bee to that plant and it is determined to seek it out.

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  17. Olga looks as happy as a pig in mud! Plus ... she has her tennis ball! What a happy girl!
    Keep an eye on that bee and just see what it is up to! The orchid is gorgeous!

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  18. That is a determined bee. Love the video of Olga, she looks so happy and carefree, not old at all.

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  19. Nice to see you taking good care of your pollinator!

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  21. The timing of Olga's woof and the start of the funky guitar music is absolutely perfect :) She is having a wonderful time and it made me smile to see it!

    I can't imagine living without screens but I understand that's common over there. Rescuing bugs feels like a thumb in the leaking dike but we do what we can, eh? Good on ya. That's a gorgeous plant.

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  22. Olga knows how to live life to the fullest! I want your colorful little skull.

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  23. I wouldn't like a bee, even an infatuated one, inside the house but it seems determined!

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  24. A bee wants to live in your house. I wonder why?

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  25. Olga is so happy! How does the bee get inside so easily? Do you not have window and door screens?

    Love,
    Janie

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  26. That's fascinating about the orchid and the bee. That's a love affair! Is the window always open? (Or does he have a key?!)

    Olga. She defines the word "bliss."

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  27. I think you do have a case of bee-orchid infatuation.
    Perfect choice of music for your video.

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  28. Yael: Interesting! Thanks for passing that along!

    Mitchell: One of my favorite things about the UK is the lack of need for window screens. There just aren't many bugs here.

    River: Yes! That's Eduardo, who we bought in Cancun.

    Andrew: I thought that music suited the mood pretty well.

    YP: I dunno! Bees are pretty persistent!

    Sabine: I completely agree. I don't kill anything, at least not deliberately.

    Peter: Yeah, I've seen florists do that. A lot of times when you buy an orchid it comes with stakes. I'm sure I have some around here somewhere.

    Ed: Ha! In your case, or mine, it would be a spectacle. :)

    Boud: I should have put her in the Olympics!

    Bob: We inevitably get them inside sometimes, because we have a large lavender just outside the back door.

    Ellen: Yes, I do remember those mud-daubers (as we called them) from my childhood!

    Susan: Either a defined route or super-sensitive sensory apparatus that lead it there!

    Ellen D: Maybe! I've never tried that. The problem is it's so topsy-turvy with that big bloom stalk. I'd have to really secure it against the wind.

    Red: It's impossible to miss. It buzzes quite loudly!

    Sharon: It's strange. I just wonder what it's responding to.

    Marcia: Yes, the tennis ball is an essential part of the rolling ritual. She has to roll around on her toy.

    Pixie: She is amazingly playful given her age! And she really does just radiate joy.

    Jim: I would never harm it!

    Jenny-O: Our popular grocery store Tesco's motto is "Every little helps." That applies to a lot of things, like saving bugs!

    Kelly: We got it in Cancun many years ago, when I met up with Ms Moon there!

    Margaret: It has shown absolutely no interest in anything but that orchid.

    Colette: Because we're so sweet? (Bleah)

    Janie: Nope, no screens. No one in the UK has screens. There aren't enough bugs. (And apparently never have been.)

    John: You can get one on e-Bay quite cheaply, I suspect! They're pretty common, made by an English pottery in the '60s.

    Jeanie: At this time of year, the windows are always open.

    Ms Moon: It's not really my kind of music but it fit the mood so well! LOL

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