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Relocating six million Singapore bees, and counting - one nest at atime

Clarence Chua, 42, rescues bees with a bandana, and sometimes his bare hands. He scoops?them? from nests into wooden boxes, to relocate them.

Chua stated, "I like that they don't mind if I am close to them as long as you respect them and do not threaten their safety."

Residents of tropical Singapore who find bees nesting inside their homes will typically call "pest control" to exterminate the nests within minutes, for about S$80-S$150 (62-$116). Chua has persuaded a growing number of people to let him rescue bees between S$100 to S$500.

He has relocated 100 nests per year on average in the past six years. This is equivalent to saving 6 million bees. The humane relocation involves moving the entire nest while keeping the queen, baby bees, and worker bees in the colony. The bees are then'moved to the three apiaries he manages. One of them is in his backyard.

Chua has saved bees in all kinds of exotic places. From a "spirit home" inside a condominium, to the engine of a plane, which couldn't take off until a swarm had been relocated.

He noted that as awareness about bee rescues improved, local town councils which manage public housing estates?where almost 80% of population live? began to engage his services.

The job is not without dangers.

He once tried to rescue what he thought were docile, calm bees from a condominium ledge, but they attacked him. In the 30 second it took him to undo his harness and escape, he had been stung 100 times.

He said that it taught him to never underestimate nature. He still approaches nests without a beesuit to gauge the mood of the swarm before donning a suit if they seem agitated.

Chua promotes bee rescues via social media. Some of the videos of his exploits are shot from a first-person perspective with Meta glasses. They have attracted?some 20,000 fans.

"Without bees there will be much less fruit or more expensive fruit because there is a shortage of fruit around the world." He said that we are dependent on a staggering amount of crops for our survival.

(source: Reuters)