wax
sleep
Under your bed.
in the winter
Honey bees do not sleep, by our understanding of sleep, anyway. They do take a break and become relaxed. Their body temperature drops and they become unresponsive during this time.
Bees are ugly scum who sting you in your sleep and kill you and your mutely/nainai and steel your wife and kids.
On a mini Bee Shelf. They are quite neat little things
Bees do sleep. Not necessarily at night. I have observed bees and photographed them sleeping in flowers in my backyard. At first I thought it might be an intoxicating element of the plant and perhaps the bees were all dead. I touched one to check and the bee reacted as a person sleeping. The bee was disturbed by the touch, moved about, re-adjusted his position and seemed to go back to sleep. There were well over a dozen bees and one yellow jacket in this bed of flowers when this observation was made. Fascinating.
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a batter butt In the non-winter months, honeybees don't sleep at all.
Yes, bees do sleep. In fact the saying 'busy as a bee' is a bit of a myth. Researchers have marked and watched individual bees in colonies and reported that they spend about a third of their time doing actual tasks within the hive, about another third feeding or just wandering about the hive with no apparent purpose, and for the remainder of the time they remain still. During these times the heads drop and the legs seem to relax, letting the body rest -- effectively a state of sleep.Young bees, while they are still working only within the hive, tend to have rather chaotic sleep and activity patterns, snatching short bouts of sleep at any time. But once they start foraging they become more diurnal, foraging during the day and sleeping at night.
Carpenter Bees do not attack bumble bees.