Looks like it's the Dielis pilipes, Hairy-footed Scoliid Wasp!
These bees live in the ground, maybe sorta solitary but in communities? Lots of holes in the dry sandy silt ground where they live. The fly around in patterns around the nests. I thought maybe some sort of cuckoo bee but I'm not sure. They're big, about 25mm long. Some kind of bee, wasp, hornet. More pics in the reply.
Wide-striped Sweat Bee, Halictus farinosus. maybe. On the rhubarb flowers.
*edit @Spaceways Suggested a Yellow-haired Sun Fly, Myathropa florea, the Batman hoverfly, and they have been identified in the region, and it really looks like one.
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Some kind of drone fly I guess. Seems more yellow than most of the photos of the 'Common' one. It's on a chokecherry blossom.
Another Syrphus ribesii hoverfly. This one seemed a little smaller but I think it's the same. Could be female vs male differences.
Looks like a Western Blue Orchard Mason Bee, Osmia lignaria ssp. propinqua, in the 40+ year old Gravenstein apple tree.
I rescued a bumble bee that was stuck in the chicken coop. Looks like a Western Bumble Bee, Bombus occidentalis. I also saw 4 or maybe 5 Ashy Digger bees in one clove currant bush. I'm not sure I ever saw more than one at once last year.
A small native pollinator on the Imperial Epineuse Plum, Prunus domestica.
Unidentified black bee with pollen on the clove currants. North Central Washington State.
Dandelions are not good for native pollinators. Try another tack to excuse not weeding.
#NativePlants #NativePollinators #Ecosystems #Sustainabilty #Resilience
https://www.cleannorth.org/2021/04/08/the-common-dandelion-bee-saviour-or-pesty-invasive/
Saw a bumblebee on the ground by the beehives and picked it up to put it in the sun. It flew away not long after getting a little sunshine. I figured it was a male bee so I wasn't worried about getting stung but I think it might actually be a Bombus Vagans queen. The half-black bumblebee.
Bees sleeping last night and a leafcutter on the rudbeckia this morning. Melissodes agilis and some kind of Megachile.
Probably some kind of furrow bee, Genus Halictus, on a calendula flower.
Took some photos of the bumblebee while I was waiting for it to be on it's way.