I've noticed quite a number of recipes and instructions calling for the use of beeswax.
I like this. I like beeswax, and would love to try out the patch lube recipes, etc.
But I have one concern: I've found that beeswax attracts QUITE a bit of attention from bees. Once a bee got into our house, and made a--well, beeline--for a candleholder we had with beeswax candles in it. Kept buzzing around the candles, hovering, investigating. Pretty clearly the bee smelled something it liked, and was not to be dissuaded until I flattened it with a flyswatter.
I think I've also seen bees take an interest in leather that I'd treated with beeswax and left outdoors to dry.
In recent years, my area has been so taken over by killer bees that it's said that just about every wild bee colony in the greater Phoenix area is of the Africanized "killer bee" variety. It's common to come across hives if one's out walking in the desert--my dad tells me of large hives on cliffs on a large urban-park mountain where he hikes; I've seen a hive in an abandoned tortoise burrow.
It occurs to me to ask: anyone ever had any untoward interest from bees, as a result of having beeswax soaked into one's leather goods, or all over one's fingers or gun, or in hole in one's rifle stock?
Might be worth thinking about.
I like this. I like beeswax, and would love to try out the patch lube recipes, etc.
But I have one concern: I've found that beeswax attracts QUITE a bit of attention from bees. Once a bee got into our house, and made a--well, beeline--for a candleholder we had with beeswax candles in it. Kept buzzing around the candles, hovering, investigating. Pretty clearly the bee smelled something it liked, and was not to be dissuaded until I flattened it with a flyswatter.
I think I've also seen bees take an interest in leather that I'd treated with beeswax and left outdoors to dry.
In recent years, my area has been so taken over by killer bees that it's said that just about every wild bee colony in the greater Phoenix area is of the Africanized "killer bee" variety. It's common to come across hives if one's out walking in the desert--my dad tells me of large hives on cliffs on a large urban-park mountain where he hikes; I've seen a hive in an abandoned tortoise burrow.
It occurs to me to ask: anyone ever had any untoward interest from bees, as a result of having beeswax soaked into one's leather goods, or all over one's fingers or gun, or in hole in one's rifle stock?
Might be worth thinking about.