(1) I've been so busy being investigated, preparing for this lynch bee starting tomorrow that I hadn't had an opportunity tou251cu00f6u251cu00e7u252cu00ac
(2) Many are now familiar with the One Book, One City program, a sort of mass reading bee , designed to promote civic and literary conversation around a single book read in the same week.
(3) There will be an emergency quilting bee to make them a wedding quilt tomorrow at the Torger's house, but only certain families are being asked to come.
(4) The old-time quilting bee is well remembered, although most quilts were actually solo products.
(6) In fact I had noticed a solitary bee dancing in the air at the front of the house on quite a few occasions this season.
(8) As with any type of wasp, bee , or yellow jacket, please exercise care to avoid getting stung!
(9) The foe not being the bee - the honeybee has never let us down.
(10) A bee flying home typically pauses at the entrance while a guard bee checks her chemical credentials as a nest mate.
(11) As this type of bee is very important for flower pollination, I think my botanically-inclined readers will enjoy learning more.
(12) Even accounting for native bee pollinators, honeybees still do most of the pollinating of fruits and vegetables in your garden.
(13) A large, shiny-headed bee hovered over a tangled rose bush and then floated off into the air, the extinguished sound leaving an even deeper silence.
(14) There are over 30,000 species of bees and in most of them the bees live solitary lives.
(15) Perhaps the reason is that social bees , which are largely opportunistic, dominate pollinator faunas in northern regions.
(16) Mr. John Donoghue, president of the beekeepers association, gave a slide show of trees and flowers that are good for bees and insects.
(17) He believed in bees ; everything the bee did was perfect, from the way it flew and gathered food, to the way it conducted its social habits.
(18) They also kill pollinating insects such as bees and butterflies.
(19) Perhaps it was their ability to be pollinated by bees and other insects, or perhaps the way animals that ate their fruit could disperse seeds in their droppings.
(20) Insects such as bees facilitate pollination as they buzz from plant to plant while feeding on nectar or collecting pollen.