Commercial Clients



Fresno Chaffee Zoo NIACC-Avitech Technologies Broadway Faire 10 Movie Theater
   
Fresno Lincoln CMC Rebar Inc. Data Central
   
Statewide Construction Blastech OK Sales
   
Poso Canal Company Wolfson and Company Dolex Dollar Enterprises
   
United Local Credit Union Watkins and Bortolussi Construction Days Inn
   
Country Inn Ebell Insurance Holiday Inn
   
The Sportsman's Club Town Plaza Shopping Center  

Property Management Co.s and Apartments



Hinds Investments Dana Butcher and Associates Hamby Trust
   
Susie's Properties North Palm Investments Northstar Investments
   
Tarlton Properties Robert L. Jensen & Associates Vancouver Property Management
   
Schuil & Associates Robert L. Jensen & Associates Manco Abbott, Inc.
   
McIntoch & Associates Beacon Associates Villa Primavera Apts.
   
Santa Clarita Apts. Oak Veiw Apts. Village Apts.
   
Oak Park Apts. Cedar Commons Apts. Kings Court Apts.

Churches



The Well Community Church Our Lady of Perpetual Help Visalia First Assembly of God
   
Visalia United Methodist Church Cross Church Peace Lutheran Church

Video: Very aggressive Yellow-Jackets


About Honey Bees Did you know...


  1. Bees do not create honey; they are actually improving upon a plant product, nectar. The honey we eat is nectar that bees have repeatedly regurgitated and dehydrated.
  2. The average American consumes a little over one pound of honey a year.
  3. In the course of her lifetime, a worker bee will produce 1/12th of a teaspoon of honey.
  4. To make one pound of honey, workers in a hive fly 55,000 miles and tap two million flowers.
  5. In a single collecting trip, a worker will visit between 50 and 100 flowers. She will return to the hive carrying over half her weight in pollen and nectar.
  6. A productive hive can make and store up to two pounds of honey a day. Thirty-five pounds of honey provides enough energy for a small colony to survive the winter.
  7. Theoretically, the energy in one ounce of honey would provide one bee with enough energy to fly around the world.
  8. While foraging for nectar and pollen, bees inadvertently transfer pollen from the male to the female components of flowers. Each year, bees pollinate 95 crops worth an estimated $10 billion in the U.S. alone. All told, insect pollinators contribute to one-third of the world's diet.
  9. Most researchers believe the honeybee originated in Africa. The first European colonists introduced Apis mellifera, the common honeybee, to the Americas. Native Americans referred to the bees as "White Man's Fly." Today honeybees can be found all over the world.
  10. Read More  Bee Facts