Where did all the BEES go?

I live in Upstate S. Carolina and by this time last year, I had HUNDREDS of bees every day in my half acre perennial polinator flower garden. This year I haven’t seen ONE BEE on my flowers which are in almost full bloom!! I don’t use pesticides. What is going on?? I wonder if this is being caused by others using pesticides or if it’s being caused by what is dumped into our skies overhead, but this is alarming to me. Someone needs to investigate what is happening to our bee population and pass laws against whatever is causing this disappearance of our bees!

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Perhaps the bees normally stayed in North Carolina but suffered due to the floods and storm?

Yes, I just checked for your state, you have an agency responsible for pesticide spraying working out of a university. They probably happily allow it by aircraft. I agree also that it is also other stuff being dumped into the skies (geoengineering). As far as investigating, yes, but the top dogs of military, gov’t, globalists are all in on it. It’s not only to depoluate bees but with people being the main target. So we have to stop this. I figure the bad people have a plan and place to go.

For your state, I pasted what I found for pesticide regulation. If they’re like California, they’ll pretend they care and want to do the right thing (which some of them probably believe). You might be able to get on a mailing list to see when they are going to spray your area and as well voice your concerns. These bad agencies need more pressure at the least and to know more people are aware of what they’re doing.

"In South Carolina, pesticide regulation is managed by the Department of Pesticide Regulation (DPR), which operates under Clemson University’s Division of Regulatory Services. This department serves as the state’s lead agency for overseeing the distribution, sale, and use of pesticides. Department of Pesticide Regulation "

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Here’s your answer …

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Suggest reaching out to some local bee keepers, see what you can learn. A plague to honey bees is the varroa mite, which leads to colony dieback & collapse. The varroa mite is an invasive species, and serves as a vector for at least 5 debilitating bee viruses that compound its impact. It was first found in the US in 1987 and has since spread across the country. The seasonal movement of hives has contributed to the mites spread. I seriously doubt that EMF or contrails have anything to do with bee population decline.

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Hi Catherine,

Your guess is spot on. It is absolutely what is being dumped on us from the sky via chem-trail jets, geoengineering jets and other jets that spray chemicals at night (to keep mosquito populations low, etc.) that are hurting all insect populations including our beloved pollinators. Anthony William (The Medical Medium) has created a numer of podcasts and videos that address these concerns and exposes the truth of what’s really going on. If Humanity wants to continue to exist on planet earth we’ve got to protect our all of our insect friends (including mosquitos, not just “beneficial insects”) because they are part of Creation and each has a valuable role to play here on Earth.

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