04/21/2026
I hovered six inches from your face on the back porch. You flinched, waved your hat, and went inside.
I'm an eastern carpenter bee. The one that just dive-bombed your head was me — the male. I don't have a stinger. I've never had one. The entire display was a bluff performed by an unarmed bee.
My job is to guard the airspace around the female's nest. When anything enters the zone, I intercept. I hover and hold position. If you leave, I win. If you don't, I have no second move.
The females can sting but almost never do — only if physically grabbed. The large bee holding still in front of your face is the one that can't do anything to you.
The holes in your beam are her work. Perfect half-inch circles drilled straight in, then turned to run along the grain. She carves chambers inside, stocks each one with pollen and nectar, lays an egg on top, and seals it with chewed wood pulp. She reuses the same tunnel across seasons, adding branches.
🐝 The part that changes how you see her:
She's one of the few bees that can pollinate a tomato flower. The pollen inside is locked in tubes that only release under a specific vibration. She grips the flower and buzzes her body until the pollen shakes loose. Tomatoes, peppers, eggplants, and blueberries all depend on bees that can do this. Honeybees can't.
🌿 If you see one:
- The dive-bomber is the stingless male — wait a few seconds and he returns to his post
- If the beam damage concerns you, seal finished tunnels with a wood plug in fall after the bees have emerged — don't plug active tunnels
- Offer an alternative by mounting a block of untreated softwood nearby — she may drill there instead of your trim
- Skip the wasp spray near the beam — she's pollinating the vegetables that need her most
The bee you ran from can't sting. The one you've never noticed is the reason your tomatoes set fruit 🌿