 Who says you can't have it all? Not Appalachian Wireless, we know what you want. Appalachian Wireless offers the hottest smartphones and unlimited data plans, all on the region's number one network. Late spring and early summer is swarms season for honey bees and unless you're a beekeeper, finding a swarm of bees on your property can be a scary thing. But thanks to a Johnson County man known to many simply as the bee man, swarms can be removed quickly like the one we're about to show you. The landowner called me up about a week ago and the colony had actually swarmed. They came out into an apple tree and I was in the garage and I heard them swarming outside and I walked out and there looked like thousands of them everywhere and so I called the bee man. Jason Conley came and removed the swarm but there were thousands more still inside the home. And if you can see they're coming and going right under the piece of vinyl and I've located them in the ceiling in here and so we're getting ready to go in here and take them out. Safely moving a colony of bees takes a lot of planning and careful execution and it all starts with finding the queen. So the idea today is once I get them exposed is I'm going to find my queen and I'm going to put her in this little cage and I'm going to hand the cage down to one of my helpers and they're going to go ahead and install her in the box. Conley is a third generation beekeeper and has a genuine love for honey bees but there is another reason why moving a colony instead of killing it is a smart solution. The honey bee is protected. There's a lot of lolls in place for them and so we try to save everyone that we can and relocate them to a safe place and in a year or so we'll start harvesting honey off of them. Every time I get a phone call for a removal it's just like man I just hit the jackpot and that's one more colony of bees that we get to save. And coming up in the second part of this story we'll get an up close and personal look at this particular colony that had been living in that Johnson County home for three years. I just hope it's everything that I wanted it to be. Oh yeah check her out boys check it out. In Johnson County, I'm Shannon Deskins, EKB News.