Friday, 16 May 2025

First aid

 

First aid

Cross stitch waiting to be started

I wasn’t expecting to use the bee remedy I mentioned in yesterday’s post so soon, if at all, but this morning, Barry found a bee on the conservatory floor. He picked her up and took her outside away from curious cats and dogs.

I mixed a sugar water solution and fed it to the bee, which was very sluggish and disorientated. After several minutes I picked her up on a stem of herb robert (Geranium robertianum, wild geranium) and put her on a ceanothus flower. She is breathing and moving around, but not making any effort to fly, and it is now several hours since she was first found. It is also rather cool and breezy, not the best conditions for a weakly bee, so I don’t really hold out much hope for her, but at least she’s got a full tummy.

I don’t know what species of bee she is; all I do know is that she is not a honey bee. She is such a little creature, so fragile, so important.

Another cross stitch waiting to be started

55 comments:

  1. Thank you for rendering first aid. Maybe she just needs to rest until the sun comes out and warms her.

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    1. That was my hope. This morning she's not around.

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  2. To bee or not to bee - that is the question.

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    Replies
    1. 'The slings and arrows of outrageous fortune' - very fitting.

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  3. Awwww, little thing. Thank you for caring!

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  4. You tried. Good for you. 👍

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    1. She's not around this morning, so perhaps she revived.

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  6. Are you becoming the Bee Whisperer??

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  7. She (he, it?) looks like what we here on the other side of the pond call a bumble bee. Aerodynamically speaking, they should not be able to fly as their body mass is so out of proportion to their wingspan.

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  8. I hope the bee has recovered. I'm glad you tried to help. It certainly looks like a bumblebee.

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    1. She's not around this morning , in the sun, so hopefully she revived.

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  9. I have read that bees generally go to ground when it is their time to die. I am glad you took her outside though.

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    Replies
    1. Honey bees can live for a year, but bumble bees only survive a matter of months. Such a short, busy span.

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  10. Even if her wings don't lift her skyward again, your kindness gave her warmth, safety, and a final meal—a quiet act of compassion that matters deeply.

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  11. Well done! My friend rescued a bee which was trapped inside a peony; the petals had closed when the rain came!

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    Replies
    1. That is astonishing - how observant of your friend.

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  12. Bravo! Here's hoping the bee finds it's strength and flies, away

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  13. They are so important to the whole balance of the world.

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  14. Hi Janice - that's great to read ... as you say though it's still cold(ish) at the moment. Love the cross stitch options - cheers Hilary

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    1. It remains to be seen if I ever get around to doing the cross stitch!

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  15. Poor wee bumblebee. Not an early queen then awake from winter and looking for a place for her new colony?

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    1. I don't think she was big enough to be a queen, and was such a little bee.

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  16. Get well soon little bee x

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  17. There are simply so many kinds of bees aren't there. And everyone serves a great purpose. And all we humans can do when we can and try to help.

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    Replies
    1. Identifying bees is quite a task, it's true.

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  18. What a kind thing for you to do.

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  19. It is so sad when this happens. I found one on the patio recently and tried the sugar and water method, sadly it didn't recover.

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    1. Their lifespan is really short - such a shame.

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  20. If you lived in the United States I would call your bee a bumble bee. I hope yours recovered. A lovely act of kindness, either way.

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    1. I think she is a small bumble bee, but what sort I couldn't say.

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  21. It is a kind thing you did. I am looking after Indian Mynah birds by squirting them with water from an atomiser when they are nearby. This will protect them from a grumpy old man when spring arrives and they want to nest on the balcony below.

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    1. That's really kind of you o save them the effort of moving home later on. I wanted to have a mynah bird, once. I don't know now why I didn't have one.

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  22. What a wonderfully touching story! I never heard of giving first aid to a bee... You are so kind. Hope that the bee ended up surviving!

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    1. She's not in evidence today, so perhaps she did survive. 😊

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    2. I am going to say that she did. That makes me feel better.

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  23. Sweet story. I hope she made it.

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  24. Well done for administering this very important first aid.
    Hopefully once it had warmed up a little the bee felt strong enough to fly on.

    All the best Jan

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  25. Isn't it terrific that we humans can be so inspired by something so small?

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  26. You did your best, and now it's up to nature. Keeping my fingers crossed that she made it! xxx

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  27. Thank you for showing first aid kindness to this bee. I hope she managed to survive.

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