News bees: harbingers of fortune?

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Estimated time to read:

1–2 minutes

By Steve Roark | The Winchester Sun

I’m sure you’ve been out­side, and a yel­low and black, bee-like crit­ter flies up to your head and just hov­ers in mid air, star­ing at you. Growing up I was told they were “news bees” and they were try­ing to tell me some­thing. Another name for news bees is hov­er fly, and as the name sug­gests these crea­tures have the abil­i­ty to hov­er per­fect­ly still like a hum­ming­bird or helicopter.

I’ve seen two dif­fer­ent kinds of news bees, one that looks sort of like a yel­low jack­et only big­ger, and the oth­er is much small­er with a skin­ny body. Both have yel­low and black mark­ings, and belong to a group of insects called “flower flies”. They are not bees and so can­not sting, but they do mim­ic their appear­ance for pro­tec­tion. If you ever see one sit­ting still you will note that they have only two wings instead of the four that all bees, yel­low jack­ets, etc. have.

There are over 900 species of flower flies, and most of them have the yellow/black mark­ings. As their name sug­gests, flower flies feed on nec­tar as adults, while the lar­vae feed on dead plant mate­r­i­al. Some are ben­e­fi­cial by prey­ing on destruc­tive aphids.

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According to moun­tain folk­lore, news bees are an omen. If the bee hov­er­ing near you is most­ly yel­low, it means good luck, espe­cial­ly if you can get one to light on your fin­ger. If the bee is most­ly black, and it flies into a win­dow and back out again, it means bad luck, per­haps even death. If a news bee is buzzing close to your ear, it is a sign that impor­tant news is com­ing your way. My mom said that as kids they would talk to the bees while they hov­ered close by.

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