Bees often go inside of attics or parapet walls at the roof because of the elevated location and protection against predators.
I have a bees nest in my roof.
They are a great place for the bees because they are elevated have insulation and most predictors have no way of getting to them.
It is important to know that when you have a hive inside a wall the honey and the bees have to come out.
Additionally roof bees can easily get into the general living area of the home and cause mischief.
Nests under roof eaves or in the ground.
If there are nests in the wall you may hear buzzing from all the bee activity.
Knowing what kind of bee it is can help.
Locate the entrance through which the bees are entering your siding.
Bees inside an eave roofing system or attic is by far the most common place we find bee hives.
Generally honey bees don t colonise roofs when they are flying in beneath tiles they more often than not are colonising a cavity wall or an old dismantled chimney stack that is hidden beneath the tiles or possibly a soffit.
In the picture below these bees have protection from the rain sun.
You may not know for sure how many nests are inside your siding or how large the nests are.
Bumblebees typically nest in or near the soil such as in deserted rodent nests compost piles or underneath raised outdoor structures like sheds or porches.
Honey bees in roof spaces.
Bee id chart wasp id.
If possible mark off any entrance holes you find so that you can easily identify them later.
Locate the nests since the nest is in your siding you have never seen it only the bees entering and exiting.
If the bees are not in a very noticeable area it is likely they have been there a good while.
Bees in the roof are another story altogether.
They usually don t use home structures to build their nests but are sometimes found in roofs attics and wall cavities if there is access from the outside.
Honey bees in roof spaces are not nearly as common as you might expect in fact we don t come across honey bees in roof spaces that often.
Follow where they seem to disappear into the side of your house.
Buzzing noises in the wall.
If bees are making nests in your walls or attic you may find dead bees in windowsills or near doors.
A hive in this area of the home can attract other rodents and pests into the house.
Honey bees buzzing around the roof line eave facial freeze block or a garage wall fence jacuzzi or a similar structure likely indicates a beehive exists.
Observe the bees during the afternoon as that is the most active time of day for yellow jackets.