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  1. #11
    BPnet Veteran Ax01's Avatar
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    wow, that's beautiful. what are the chances of that happening? and for it to stick around and take pix? so cool!

    i have a "preserved" dragonfly at home. one day i found it, dead and dried but still very pretty, between the wind guard and hood of my mom's car.

    also i thought u worked at Macy's or Nordstrom's or whatever the UK equivalent is lol.
    RIP Mamba
    ----------------

    Wicked ones now on IG & FB!6292

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    richardhind1972 (06-26-2018)

  3. #12
    BPnet Senior Member richardhind1972's Avatar
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    Re: Wildlife at work

    No it's a really big garden £5 million+ a year, so pretty busy, we have 21 centres round the UK and we not the biggest our largest one dies £10million a year
    we do a massive Xmas department at end of August after garden furniture goes.
    I do all the Xmas displays and most of the visual merchandising around the centre
    Yes it was pretty cool the dragon fly, I'm sure I looked it up and it's a lesser hawker species
    Cheers Richard

    Sent from my TA-1024 using Tapatalk

  4. #13
    BPnet Senior Member richardhind1972's Avatar
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    Re: Wildlife at work

    That bee is so cool


    Sent from my iPod touch using Tapatalk

  5. #14
    BPnet Lifer Bogertophis's Avatar
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    Re: Wildlife at work

    Quote Originally Posted by richardhind1972 View Post
    That bee is so cool


    Sent from my iPod touch using Tapatalk
    I know...I've never seen anyone do that before...who knew?

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    richardhind1972 (06-26-2018)

  7. #15
    BPnet Royalty Zincubus's Avatar
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    Re: Wildlife at work

    Quote Originally Posted by Bogertophis View Post
    How long do bees live approximately ?


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro




  8. #16
    BPnet Lifer Bogertophis's Avatar
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    Re: Wildlife at work

    Quote Originally Posted by Zincubus View Post
    How long do bees live approximately ?


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk Pro
    I'm not a bee expert, but I think that's a bumble bee in the video & the queen lives the longest...only about a year, and the male drones far less.
    Only the queen hibernates & survives winter, until the following summer and around the time that new 'queens' are born into the colony.
    Last edited by Bogertophis; 06-26-2018 at 06:10 PM.

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  10. #17
    BPnet Lifer Bogertophis's Avatar
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    I can personally attest to the docility of bumble bees, by the way...I get quite a few in my yard here, & one of my elderly dogs chases all things that buzz-
    rather cluelessly, I might add, but she seems never to get stung? Anyway, I have lots of flowering ground-cover (vincas) in my back yard, & in spite of being
    chased by my goofy dog, the bees don't seem to ever retaliate...they just move over & go on about their business. So I can understand how the lady in the
    video wasn't stung by the bee she helped, but it probably wouldn't work so well with a honey bee, not to mention that some of them are "Africanized" (& far
    easier to arouse).

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    richardhind1972 (06-26-2018)

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