Friday, June 25, 2010

50,000 House Guests


Last night, the wonderful bee keepers came to our house around 6:30 pm and left at 10 pm with tubs full of bees, honeycomb and honey! Thanks to Swarmbusters we have 50,000 less house guests. Their card says, "Who you gonna call?" Funny! I guess you've got to have a sense of humor when you're a bee keeper.

When they arrived, they listened to our walls with a stethoscope to determine where the largest concentration of bees were. They decided to go out the upstairs window and onto the roof and cut a hole in the siding to get to the hive.


They were looking for the queen but never found her. They cut out the bee-covered honeycomb and filled up at least two Rubbermaid tubs with the sticky stuff.


Once they got all of the honeycomb out, they used a shop vac to vacuum out the remaining bees. Thank you so much, Steve, Roxi and Vern!


Stuff I learned about bees (that I didn’t know I wanted to know):
  • Bee removal experts hope to find the queen but only find her 1 in 10 times. If they do find the queen, all the other bees go to her which makes moving the hive much easier.
  • It’s against the law in Michigan for an exterminator to kill honeybees.
  • Older honeycomb is a dark, almost brown color. New honeycomb is very light yellow, almost white.
  • Honey bees really do only sting once and then they die so they only sting as a last resort. They will sometimes dive and bounce off of you, as a warning.
  • Honeybees have different jobs - think Bee Movie. There are guard bees that stay outside the hive. Guard bees have the most venom. The worker bees that usually always stay in the hive have only a little bit of venom and then there are the drones (male bees) that have no stinger. The bee’s stinger can continue pumping venom into it’s victim for 30 seconds which is why it’s important to get the stinger out.
  • All male bees do is eat honey and mate with the queen. Once they mate, they die. In the winter, all male bees are kicked out of the hive to starve and die.
  • The worker bees only live 8 weeks. So the queen is having babies all summer. The baby bees look like a grub or maggot. They are put in a chamber in the honey comb and sealed off until they are mature.
  • In the winter, the bees generate enough heat to keep the hive at 90 degrees. They live off the honey they made until they can make more honey in the spring.
  • Honey is only gathered once or twice a year. Usually in July and then maybe in the fall, if there was a good August crop and the bees were able to get food from the blossoming plants.
  • The hum of 50,000 stirred up bees kind of sounds like the hum of a fluorescent light bulb.
What an adventure! I must admit I was amazed what these little bees could accomplish and the flawless design of their honeycomb. They are truly the ultimate graphic designers. They're just not allowed to work at my studio!

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

Bumble bee, bumble bee...

Actually, they're not bumble bees. They're honey bees and they are living inside the wall of my 140-year-old farm house. Yikes is right! I spoke to a bee keeper today who said there could be 20,000 bees in my walls. Double yikes! Luckily, we're not living in the house at the moment because we are trying to renovate it and sell our condo.

Dustin, my hubby, and I walked into the kitchen of the house on Sunday to discover at least 50 dead bees on the floor. Wondering where they came from, we walked around the house to discover this scene:


The picture will never do what we saw justice. I went out and bought the "spray at 22 feet away" RAID and sprayed them. The bee keeper told me, "all that stuff does is make them mad." Which is exactly what I witnessed. In his opinion, our only option is to have an exterminator come out and kill them. So now I have a headache from having talked to and mostly, left messages for, exterminators and bee keepers. I had one exterminator tell me that I should call other bee keepers just to get some different opinions as to if they really needed to be killed or if they could be removed. The first bee keeper said that it would be an eight week process to remove them! The really crazy part of all of this is that once the bees are gone (dead or alive), we're going to have to take the siding off and clean out the honey comb and all of the honey or else more bees will come. I guess "if you build it, they will come!"

We also had trees removed and trimmed. Here are the before and after pictures. Again, it's hard to tell in the pictures what a huge difference there is.


Happy Renovating!!

Monday, June 14, 2010

Creative Surge

I have had the creative surge lately. All you artists out there know what I'm talking about. The irresistible urge to create...something. Not that I've done anything about it, but I feel it, you know. It's a very interesting, unique, restless feeling that I think only creatives experience.

I haven't picked up a pencil, pastel, charcoal, paint brush, etc. in a long time. "Long time" is probably an understatement. Probably not since, oh, I don't know, college! How sad. Actually, that's not true. I have done a few creative projects along the way but, for the most part, life has gotten in the way of creativity. And I should say I'm talking about the creativity that produces art that is not digital. Working as a graphic designer, I do get to be creative every once in a while.

Anyway, I feel super rusty in the drawing/sketching department so about a week ago I thought I'd like to commit to sketching a little everyday. I bought my sketchbook. (Yes, I had to buy one. All of my art "stuff" is in storage). And I will post a sketch a week. No critiques allowed. That's the beauty of sketching. It's practice; it's warming up. There is freedom in sketching.

So I had been feeling this way when, lo and behold, I find this link for a sketchbook project . I do believe this may be a sign. I find this project just fascinating! Check it out.

Have a lovely, project-filled week.

Friday, June 11, 2010

By George, I Think I've Got It!

Yesterday was the first official day of summer break . I didn't enforce the no-tv rule, yet. Mostly because I had a lot of work to get done. I know, not a good excuse. What am I going to do the rest of the summer?! But it was kind of nice having a lazy day where we didn't have to do anything until last night which was Emma's last t-ball game. Actually it turned out to be just a night of food and trophies but that was alright with me. The kids had fun. Emma got a trophy. Aiden had 2 cupcakes and a piece of cake or, basically, 3 pieces of frosting. Mmmm.

I have still been working on a logo and I do believe I've got it. What do you think?
Can you tell what it is? It's ok if you can't. :)


I wanted something that was happy and simple and fresh. I heart gray but I also love color, too, so this marries my love of both. I dotted one of the i's with a color taken from the dots above so the graphic and the words are cohesive. The font may still need some tweaking but other than that I really like this one.

See below, the logo in different colors. It even works in black and white.

I'm reading the book, 48 Days to Work You Love, by Dan Miller. The forward is by Dave Ramsey. In it, Dave says, "Most of us spend too much of our lives in paralyzing fear, shame, guilt, and dread when it comes to our work. Work has become the daily grind instead of the great adventure it should be." So true! This quote really spoke to me. My wonderful and thoughtful husband got this book for me. I'm going to keep reading through it. It's been good so far.

Happy Designing!

Tuesday, June 8, 2010

Struggling

For months now, I've been debating on whether or not I should go out on my own as a graphic designer. While I'm thankful for my job, it has become more of a "job" rather than a career I am passionate about. Due to the economy, my job description has changed quite a bit. I took the job in the first place because I could work completely from home! A dream come true! I loved the freedom of working at home and setting my own schedule but also the security of being employed and guaranteed hours each week. But then there were budget cuts and layoffs and I agreed to help pick up the slack. So I found myself going into the office a couple nights a week to do production and administrative work. It was actually a nice change of pace in the beginning, getting out of the house. But that was also when I was going through a tough divorce. Now I'm remarried and don't really enjoy leaving my husband two or three nights a week to go work in the office. He's not thrilled about it either.

Going out on my own is scary. I don't live in a big city so, while there are opportunities, they require more work to get. But I miss feeling passion for my career choice so all the extra work it's going to take is starting to feel worth it. I've been pouring over blogs of designers and artists trying to get advice and inspiration. I am worried that I just won't be able to do it on my own but then again, maybe I'm up for an adventure. I have a lot on my plate right now: kids, new husband, new house, selling the old house, dogs and a nearly full-time job. Because my job has required me to go into the office on top of all my other work, I tend to be completely burnt out by Thursday.

So I guess that's why I started to blog. To help me sort out my fears about starting my own business and working for myself. I'd also like to write about designs and resources and beautiful things. I've got the name: Bliss Point Design. Now on to the logo. Not as easy as you'd think!



Is Sarah going to go out on her own? Stay tuned...

The End is Almost Here (of school, that is)

I can hardly believe that tomorrow is the last day of school for my first grader, Emma. She had such a great year and had a wonderful teacher. We are looking forward to summer, though. We are going to keep busy with swimming lessons, the library reading program, a trip to see family and friends, VBS, camp. Not to mention we are renovating a 140-year-old house and trying to sell our condo! All this and no tv, since I've declared a "no tv" summer. Am I crazy? Yes, probably! Actually, I won't be that strict. I just want the tv off during the day on weekdays. There are just so many fun things to do in the summer and tv is a time-sucker. It's distracting for me, too, when I'm trying to get work done.

Here is one of my favorite pictures of Emma and her little brother, Aiden, taken last fall:


Happy summer, everyone!