To start a new colony the old queen bring about half of her workers, while leaving the new queen in the old hive with the remaining members. In nature honey bees swarm in the late spring or early summer, in the humid parts of the day. The bees swarm in clusters flying site to site like shrubs and tree branches this process of searching can last for a few hours or several days. And once a scout honey bee spotted a good location for the colony, the cluster immediately sets up the new site. While swarming they don't harm people their incentive to sting is reduced because they only need to protect the queen nothing else, but if provoked they will attacked to protect their queen at all cost. With a healthy queen bee and normal seasonal conditions for a colony to survive, the population of the hive can average hundreds of drones and 20,000-80,000 worker bees within every colony also consists of developing eggs, larvae and pupae. The colony can reach up to 80,000 only when workers store honey for winter, build combs, and forage for food during an active season. This number of individual bees can dramatically plumet during the colder season. And every colony depends on diversity for survival with every batch of bees performing specific task, that's why the queens are powerful in their society. The way worker bees make their infamous honey comb hives are their honey glands in the bees’ abdomen that secretes wax, which is used to create storage chambers for food and larvae etc within a