Bees do bite when you try to excavate them from their natural site. I know they weren’t on my property when I moved in, but they were here first. Long before us here on earth, that is.

They decided to move into the rafters of my back porch ceiling a few years ago. And just who am I to argue with a bee and its stinger? And me being an true animal lover by nature, I didn’t want to harm a stinger on their chinny chin chin. So I felt I’d leave well enough alone in order to live and let live. Besides they weren’t bothering me, were they?
One day my attitude changed when I became the proud owner of a large sophisticated GrillPro Grill
for great grilling and BBQ in this fun summer sun. So it was time to consider evicting my tiny little busy buzzy friends. You see they liked to eat as much as I and they became a nuisance nosing around my chicken, ribs and steak.
But how? Not a cakewalk by any means, or even a honey walk. But I decided to get help in this by no means small easy task of relocating the hive from under thick building material, cutting through it with saws, and finally moving them safely to their new habitat without harming them in the least little bit.
After doing some research about the nature and state of honeybees
in the world, I came to realize that most people just want them removed. They have neither the desire, knowledge, experience or patience to deal with or care for the bees in the proper manner. So they opt for the easy way out of hiring an exterminator and just 'taking them out' so-to-speak, and not for a ride in the park. They are sprayed with serious chemicals to annihilate them; having them one-minute bee a pest of sorts and the next bee gone.
But at the same time, the honeybee is becoming extinct for reasons unknown to even our best scientists. Since they are in somewhat of a fragile state and are considered an essential part of our very human existence concerning food, I wanted to do my part and help save the bees. So I did what any red blooded American would do, I placed on ad on Craigslist and got a few calls from bee enthusiasts and even a conservationist or two. They informed me that there would be cutting involved because it sounded to them like the bees had really commandeered a spot beneath the wall and they weren’t moving any time soon. I had no idea just how involved it would become.
They also informed me that there would be no charge to remove the bees but that I would have to shoulder the responsibility of repairing any damage they caused in removing the bees. I said I could live with that partly because the bees were in an area of the house of minor importance under a back parch and who was I not to embrace a little inconvenience for the survival of mankind?