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July 2, 2008
Bees swarm near Turks Head building / Photo

The Providence Journal / Bill Murphy
Beekeeper Susan Littlefield of Exeter uses cardboard boxes to collect a swarm of bees from the sidewalk in front of the Turks Head Building in downtown Providence this afternoon.
PROVIDENCE — The Turks Head building was buzzing today as a swarm of thousands of honey bees stopped traffic and mystified camera-wielding onlookers, before finally dissipating, two hours after they arrived.
Only one person was stung, a man who brought his camera close to try to get pictures of the bees.
The bees were first spotted around noon, as they descended on a yellow National Grid truck by the thousands, onlookers said.
“The truck was covered. He drove away, and they started flying around,” said Iain Thorburn, who came out of the Turks Head building to watch the sight.
They then swarmed around the intersection of Weybosset and Westminster streets, circling in a giant black cloud.
Providence Police officer Tony DaSilva drove by, and couldn’t believe what he saw.
“I said, something’s wrong here. They’ve taken over the square,” he said.
The bees soon left the air, and formed a huge, undulating pile on the sidewalk by a fire hydrant, perhaps seven feet wide at its largest.
DaSilva kept onlookers back as the bee pile ebbed and flowed, slowly shrinking as high winds blew bees off.
“I’m deathly afraid of bees. I can’t believe I’m standing this close,” DaSilva said.
Once it was clear that the bees weren’t stinging passerby, DaSilva turned into unofficial ringmaster for the crowd of onlookers — cracking bee puns as he tried to get police headquarters to send a beekeeper.
Swarming is part of the reproductive cycle of honey bees according to the North Carolina State University Cooperative Extension.
“At least they’re all bee-having,” he said to laughs from the crowd, taking pictures with their cellular phone cameras.
The city couldn’t find a beekeeper, because the usual suspects were on vacation, DaSilva was told.
“The one time of the year that we need them — and they’re all on vacation. I bet they’re all at Applebee’s,” he said, to the delight of the crowd.
-- Journal staff writer Daniel Barbarisi
Extra: More on bees from URI
By then, amateur beekeepers in the audience had decided to take matters into their own hands.
Theorizing that the bees were clustered in order to protect a queen, Dan Custer, a Textron employee, looked into the pile, found a bee much larger than all the others, and tossed her out into the air with a screwdriver.
“I flicked her out,” Custer said.
Many bees followed, and the size of the pile soon shrank dramatically.
But many bees remained, enough to entice Troy Chace of Providence to come close and get pictures — when he was stung on the thumb.
“Everybody else was doing it, so I said, 'Why not?' ” he said.
The smaller pile of bees remained until two women from the Providence Animal Rescue League, Anna Vinacco and Susan Littlefield, drove up, cardboard boxes in hand, and tried to trap as many bees as they could inside the boxes.
“They’re very docile when they swarm,” said Littlefield, who has four beehives at her home in Exeter. She herded as many bees as she could into the boxes, threw them into the back of her Subaru, and drove off, unstung.
The remaining bees melted away by 2:15 p.m., as did the crowd.
Everett Zurlinden, president of the Rhode Island Beekeepers Association, said that this is the reproductive season for honey bees, and this was likely a strong colony looking to found a second outpost. A new queen had probably been born recently, and the old queen and a swarm of forager bees had likely loaded up with honey and started looking for a second home. The swarm season typically runs from Mother’s Day until July 4.
The yellow National Grid truck had probably seemed attractive, he said.
“They normally land about 15 feet in the air. Their originally landing spot was on that truck. They like yellow for some reason,” Zurlinden said.
“I think what happened was they were completely disoriented. The truck took off, and the queen took flight, and they followed the queen,” he said.
The half-inch long bees can live in colonies ranging in size from 20,000 to 80,000, Zurlinden said. Those that swarm can be a much smaller number though, in the 3,000 to 5,000 bee range. Honey bees are not a typically aggressive type of bee in general, but swarming bees in particular do not normally sting, because they are so loaded with honey that stinging becomes difficult.
More information is available at ribeekeeper.org.
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of COURSE the beekeeper was on vacation... i bet he is a state employee too!