Our Services

Thermal image display showing a heat source in red, surrounded by cooler areas in blue. Temperature readings visible as 78.0°F and 89.9°F.
Thermal image displaying temperature variations, with key temperatures 73.0°F and 97.3°F. The image shows a color-coded scale ranging from lower temperatures in blue to higher temperatures in red and green.

Inspections for Honeybee Infestations

Huckleberry’s Honey and Bee Removal provides inspections for honeybee infestations. We use our specialized skill set to identify that it is in fact, the Apis Millifera ( The Honeybee) that is the culprit of the infestation. We also use the proper technology to identify where exactly the hive is located. The aforementioned technologies are thermal imaging devices as well as borehole cameras when necessary. A good inspection is what makes or breaks a good hive removal. These thermal images help us to precisely pinpoint the colonies so we can come up with a proper job plan for removal.

Thermal imaging showing a heat source with temperature readings, displaying hot spots in red and cooler areas in blue.
Thermal image display showing temperature readings in Fahrenheit

Honeybee Removals.

Removing Honeybee colonies is a specialized trade and removing honeybees is what we do! We like to put our best foot forward when it comes to our equipment, tools, efforts, and our continuing education as it relates to apiculture and honeybee removals. We have an extensive background in various construction trades which gives us the know-how and the expertise to disassemble and reassemble different types of construction materials correctly and confidently. We have taken our love and knowledge of beekeeping and married it with our talent as craftsmen to save our customer’s property from destruction and save a colony of bees in the process. We take pride in our work as beekeepers and as craftsmen.

A colony of bees with honeycombs inside a building structure with exposed insulation and wiring.
Close-up of a honeycomb with bees and some ductwork, partially exposed from a ceiling panel, illuminated by an orange light.