'Robber bees' invade apiarist's shop in attempted honey heist

94 lemonberry 55 9/11/2025, 4:58:08 PM cbc.ca ↗

Comments (55)

jjk166 · 4h ago
Thinking about it from the bee's perspective, this is like raiding the lair of an eldritch horror for gold. A beekeeper is just a funny looking bear-thing that takes honey sometimes, but the shop of a beekeeper is full of devices beyond a bee's comprehension, more honey than a bee would ever see in its lifetime just all sitting around, its own sun which can turn on and off. To find yourself in such a place by accident must be a crazy experience, convincing your brethren to attack it by shaking your butt is on another level.
hydrogen7800 · 2h ago
Is there a genre of fiction or collection of stories in this style that presents a fairly normal thing from a horrifying perspective? Maybe the story describes the thing in this horrific manner, and the reader slowly realizes what the "normal" thing actually is, all the while using factual basis for the phenomena. In the case of honey bees, I'm imagining the worker bees selecting a female to become queen, per wikipedia:

>"Queens are developed from larvae selected by worker bees and specially fed in order to become sexually mature."

This has much horror potential.

Jun8 · 1h ago
Not fiction but I love this part in Feynman’s The Pleasure of Finding Things Out:

“When he was very small we used to rock him to bed … and tell him stories, and I’d make up a story about little people … they lived in the ventilator; and they’d go through these woods which had great big long tall blue things like trees, but without leaves and only one stalk, and they had to walk between them and so on; and he’d gradually catch on [that] that was the rug, the nap of the rug, the blue rug …”

edent · 2h ago
I can recommend "The Bees by Laline Paull". It attempts to show the world from a bee's perspective. It is terrifying, confusing, and horrific. An excellent story.
themafia · 18m ago
> that takes honey sometimes

To them it's stealing the life blood of the hive.

> more honey than a bee would ever see in its lifetime

Bees move around the hive. They see all the honey. They individually _produce_ very little of it, but the total extent of it is surely known to them in some way.

> an eldritch horror

That's unironically how I view small winged creatures that follow their own rules and then inject me with venom, without warning, for not following them.

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NoMoreNicksLeft · 3h ago
I sometimes wonder when we see their weird behaviors like this, if there isn't a new dance "word", that just happens too infrequently to have been documented. The syntax/grammar for butt-dancing is pretty simple, and I don't think there's any documented that could lead them to sneak in through a broken door and search interior spaces.
afandian · 2h ago
They have excellent smell. Not only foraging for plants but hive smells and pheromones which are socially important. I’m sure that would be enough to get them to follow the smell inside a building.
themafia · 16m ago
"Bob's over by the entrance. He's sweaty and agitated. He's furiously pointing to a place in the field near our home."

What would any social creature do?

NoMoreNicksLeft · 12m ago
"Nah, I checked that place out 20 minutes ago... there are no flowers. It's not a real place at all!"

I mean, given how little study bee dance language has gotten, if there's another unknown word and was only performed once a year by a typical hive, no one would have ever seen it. And their vocabulary isn't taught, it's instinctive, so low frequency usage wouldn't be an impediment to transmission.

afandian · 3h ago
Can confirm. When you’re removing honey frames or hive parts that have had honey spilled on them you have to be on the lookout for scouts. One or two can quickly escalate into dozens. And they have no qualms about coming indoors.
cryptonector · 2h ago
> And they have no qualms about coming indoors.

Bees don't like small, dark indoor spaces. But a honey house can easily be large and well-lighted, and they might not notice that it's indoors.

bregma · 2h ago
We always leave our harvested frames outside until after dark because (a) the bees go to "sleep" at night and (2) at the time of year we're usually harvesting the temperature drops into the single digits (Celsius). But the problem is not usually robbers, it's defenders from the hive you just harvested.
afandian · 2h ago
Don’t you find cold stowaways hiding between the frames the next day? I have in the past, when I’ve missed one or two.
cryptonector · 2h ago
There's always stragglers who stuck with the honey rather than going home. It's sad.
xandrius · 2h ago
Basically protecting their strage from the real robbers, from their perspective.
gus_massa · 4h ago
In a bakery like 3 block away from my home, most days there are like 20 bees trying to steal the sweet cover over the pastries. But the front wall of the business is almost completely made of glass, so they can't escape.
vardump · 4h ago
From a bee's point of view humans are the robbers.
Kye · 3h ago
Humans provide a sturdy, safe place to build hives and all they ask for in return is some of the excess honey. Bees make way more than they can use. Humans will also cart them around to food sources so they never have to worry about finding it. Seems like a sweet deal.
yesfitz · 3h ago
This is a bad take on the farming of an invasive species.

Bees don't make more honey than they can use. They make what they can and have reserves for Winter and growing in the Spring. Do you pay your landlord everything you'd otherwise save?

I've never seen a bee colony "worry" about finding food. They'll travel within a one mile radius for foraging, and four to five miles for water. Colonies will also leave a hive, or swarm (split into 2 colonies) if there is not enough resources for them.

It's not a deal. They don't understand what's happening. If you're going to take their honey, at least don't make up some weird fantasy where they're happy about it.

bregma · 2h ago
Honeybees are domestic animals that have been selectively bred over millennia to overproduce. It's like dairy cows. If a dairy cow produced that much milk naturally, either her udders or her calf would explode.

The rest I can agree with.

yesfitz · 1h ago
I don't remember my hives overflowing or bees exploding when I didn't harvest the honey.
rglullis · 1h ago
> at least don't make up some weird fantasy where they're happy about it.

Fine, as long as you don't make up a fantasy that the bees are sentient enough to be sad about their life in an environment with significant stressors, predators or disease.

yesfitz · 1h ago
Please show me where I've done that.
OhMeadhbh · 3h ago
I agree with everything you're saying. But I am a bully who likes the taste of honey. A prisoner to desire, no doubt I will not be liberated from saṃsāra anytime soon.
stavros · 2h ago
What do they do with all the honey? Is there any downside to us taking it? I don't know anything about bees.
cryptonector · 1h ago
They use the honey for:

- feeding themselves during the summer dearth

- feeding themselves during the winter

- to feed themselves in an emergency (think forest fires)

- to feed a large portion of them who will leave the hive due to lack of space and/or to reproduce the hive (swarming)

- to feed the whole hive ahead of abandoning it due to lack of space (absconding)

Honeybees have two stomachs, one that is basically a bag in which they can carry nectar (and honey) which they can deliver into comb cells and to feed larvae and the queen (who is too busy to feed herself), and one that they digest in and which they can't vomit up from. When they swarm/abscond they gorge themselves, filling both stomachs, and fly off with the queen to a new place, then they use all that stored up honey to make new comb in which to start making honey and new bees.

Feral honeybees need every drop of honey they make.

Domesticated honeybees -which are the same as feral honeybees, just in captivity- overproduce only because the beekeeper will manage their desire for space and reproduction so as to make them need much less of the honey they make, and therefore they have a large surplus that the beekeeper takes.

(Well, not all beekeepers produce honey. Some of them also or instead produce queens, nucs, hives, and/or propolis.)

afandian · 2h ago
They use it to keep warm and alive over winter.

Or a cold or dry patch. A weekend of torrential rain can put a dent in the honey stores.

Beekeepers typically replace it with sugar syrup which obviously lacks the nutrients they are evolved for. So you can buy sugar with additives.

NoMoreNicksLeft · 2h ago
Protection from predators and (as best can be managed) from disease. Supplemental food when foraged resources are insufficient. Protection from extreme weather. We spend millions of dollars researching how to combat bee diseases. They've been glorified since antiquity (go look up all the old manuscripts where they've illustrated people dressing up like bees). Nothing weird about it even if it is a fantasy. Humanity likes the honey bee.

>It's not a deal.

We will spend fortunes and invent new science to prevent their extinction. Whether they understand it or not, they grabbed a real bargain.

someuser2345 · 2h ago
> It's not a deal. They don't understand what's happening.

So what? Mutualism happens all the time in nature, even if neither party is consciously aware of it. The relationship between humans and bees is very similar to the relationship between coral polyps and algae; the algae make sugars for the polyps, and polyps provide protection for the algae.

yesfitz · 51m ago
I take issue with the framing of the industrial-scale farming of introduced species that outcompete native pollinators as a pact between equals. That the bees choose anything.

In your comparison, neither the algae nor the polyps have the capacity to reason about or alter their arrangement.

In a fair deal, both parties must be able to reason about and/or withdraw from the arrangement.

If only one party is able to reason about and withdraw from an arrangement, the other party is being used.

In this case, bees are tools being used. I'm not willing to say that it's a great moral evil for that reason, but bees not only don't have the capacity to understand the arrangement, they will die trying to kill to defend their honey.

So my only appeal in this case is not to pretend that they choose.

card_zero · 2h ago
Or unhappy about it.
yesfitz · 1h ago
I can tell you that they were always angry when I opened the hives. Plenty of stingers left in my beesuit as proof.
cryptonector · 2h ago
> Bees make way more than they can use.

When in captivity. In the wild they make what they'll need to abscond or swarm when the time comes, and they do really take all of it with them in those cases.

stronglikedan · 3h ago
the good bees know it's symbiotic
afandian · 2h ago
The “good” bees are the ones we bred not to mind.
cryptonector · 2h ago
Yes, but also the bees make too much honey if they don't need to swarm because you manage the hives better than nature (which doesn't manage them at all), so yes it's symbiotic. We split them (reproduction). We give them room so they don't have to move. We help them stay warm in the winter and cool in the summer. We help them stay disease-free. We help defend them from predators. They don't "know" any of this, naturally, and we have bread them, yes, to be calm -- except of course for the recent africanization of bees which basically undid that breeding, though we still work with them anyways (and we're trying to breed the aggressiveness back out).
russellbeattie · 3h ago
New word for me today: "apiarist"/"apiary". Never knew bee keepers had a more formal name, though it makes sense.

Dad joke: It would be more apt if instead of a-piary, it was "b-piary".

OhMeadhbh · 3h ago
So a "swarm" is the collective noun for bees. But I couldn't find a collective noun for apiarists. I propose "stung" as in "a stung of beekeepers."
afandian · 3h ago
A swarm is actually a reproductive process. It looks like a mass of bees, but it has a specific purpose and composition.

(Although maybe you’re right colloquially)

https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swarming_(honey_bee)

A load of bees engaged in robbing behaves entirely differently from a swarm, which is a magical thing to interact with.

OhMeadhbh · 3h ago
I'm just repeating what I found on the intarwebs: https://englishgrammarhere.com/collective-nouns/collective-n...
afandian · 2h ago
It’s correct enough colloquially. It’s just so much cooler than that.

Just like specialists probably differ from the general population on how many legs / arms an octopus has.

neonnoodle · 3h ago
Ironic coming from someone named "mead"!
OhMeadhbh · 41s ago
Well. Technically, it's meadhbh (or meabh.)
grilledchickenw · 3h ago
Jason Statham in "The Apiarist" doesn't have the same ring to it
NoMoreNicksLeft · 2h ago
If you'd seen the movie, you'd realize that it couldn't have been more ridiculous even if that had been the title.
nilamo · 2h ago
"Secret Backup NSA" isn't as catchy
duskwuff · 3h ago
Bonus word: if you want to sound all fancy, beekeeping is also known as apiculture.
throwup238 · 2h ago
And soldiers who use bees in battle are called the apilry
j45 · 33m ago
This reads like a future kids animated film. Look forward to it.
pavel_lishin · 1h ago
To the bee-mobile!
TZubiri · 3h ago
CBE 2025-833
OhMeadhbh · 3h ago
Is it just me or would anyone else buy a video game based on this premise?

It sorta reminds me of "Wax or the Discovery of Television Among the Bees."

em-bee · 2h ago
there ought to be two versions.

in the adult horror version you are the shopkeeper being attacked by thousands of bees.

in the kids version you are a bee-general leading your bee-army on a heist.

afandian · 2h ago
Like Untitled Goose Game.
pogue · 2h ago
Please tell me there's a video of this somewhere