Wallcliffe Bees

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  • #12539 Reply
    Ben

      Just got back from climbing wallcliff on Easter long weekend. Unfortunely I couldn’t climb I’m too sexy for my python & Flow Selecta(starts same place) due to huge beehive. We climbed Kyle, Be Free & Fun, Love & joy luckily as they were free of bees. I would like to do a few more trips. Is their a way to get rid of the beehive easily? is it ok to do so? grenade smoke bomb? What is the best time of day & year to climb?. At 9am the face was in the sun and boiling.

      cheers
      – Ben

      #12540 Reply
      Graeme

        Hi Ben , They sure get in the way those bees , but they have been there a long time and its a part of Wallcliff Crag hence some of the climbs have been named after them , the cooler weather is normaly best for a climb just need to pick you days between the rain the bees are less active then. Fun Love and Joy has tobe one of the best 24s in the state , Big call but anyone who\’s done it I think would agree !!

        #12545 Reply
        ChrisH

          The DEC tried to get rid of them by lighting a large fire which took out Walcliffe House and partly destroyed the towns of Gnarabup and Prevelly… The bees are still there though

          #12549 Reply
          Numbat

            Lots of petrol and a match, or heaps of insecticide.

            Seriously, that’s about the only way. The bees will stay there unless the queen dies or is removed. For a feral hive, it’s just about impossible to get to the queen and get her out, which only leaves fire or poison, and even if you use those, unless you get the queen, the hive will stay.

            There was a hive at Churchman’s, but someone burnt that out a while ago, even though they weren’t a problem and I climbed Major quite a few times with the bees buzzing around. The paper wasps, which are also an introduced species to WA, at Churchies and elsewhere are a lot more of a concern.

            Generally speaking, unless you get closer than about 3 or 4 metres to the bee hives, they are not a problem, but don’t wear flowery clothes and carry an epipen!

            You could try complaining to DEC and see what happens (they ban climbing there?). I believe that, at least in theory, DEC is required to manage and control feral pests on DEC-managed land.

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