![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEhCGULhUsSLoSvGIRQNMGwpyUf17oiCd0A06TY7SEaN9dMLJy26Y-SSunoDo2c9A1u5O3cpBezj-aWcbkXX3s98Zb1vI3FYq8DcfCjiwjOU5gN6Us8QV8M9aEG1V4rtXdW7axEL/s320/Bees1026.jpg)
Today, camera in hand, I took a look at other parts of the garden to see what bees were being attracted elsewhere. The chives are in full bloom right now, and they were a bonanza of bee species. They draw some different bees because they have nectar, which sunflowers don't.
This image shows the largest and smallest species together. Before I tell you, can you find the little one? She is just opposite the bumble bee, in the lower right corner, a little out of focus. This bumble bee is a big one, nearly 30mm long, while the small bee (another species I can't identify, yet) is probably no more than 5mm long. This image is somewhat larger than life size, and the larger image you can see by clicking is about 3x life size.
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Considering the worries over honey bees being decimated by "colony collapse disorder", it was a relief to see several today. There were none on my apple tree this Spring, and I saw very few prior to today.
I had begun cutting off the chive blooms, because I don't want them going to seed. They are perennial, and they've taken over a substantial section of my garden already. But when I saw so many bees, I quit cutting and got my camera instead. I will leave the rest to bloom until they fade, to feed the bees.
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