In a message dated 02/08/02 05:01:56 GMT Daylight Time, [log in to unmask] writes: << if one is foolish enough to leave an uncovered honey super in the back of one's truck. If you move this hive, the bees will hover around its spot for several days, having "memorized" its location. Same goes for the super in the truck. If robbers find anything in the back of my truck, they may form a greeting committee at that spot awaiting my return -- and further handouts -- even when the truck is not there. >> Last year I took some supers from an out apiary and loaded them in the back of my blue car. There were a few dozen bees in the supers so I drove around in a circle, stopping every quarter mile or so to let them out and fly home. I then drove back to my "home" apiary on my allotment and opened the back to allow the last few stragglers to escape while I attended to something else. I then drove home. Later that evening my next door neighbour who has an allotment close to mine mentioned as a curiosity that a number of "wasps" had entered his red car when it was parked where mine had been after I had left. Not having seen the offending insects I could offer no reason for this odd behavior in wasps. Chris