(CNN) - If you don't like bees, be happy you weren't at the Chamber of Commerce in downtown Jacksonville, Florida on Thursday.
A swarm of bees clumped on a wall nearby, where the experts quickly took over. The sight outside office windows downtown, Thursday, absolutely shocked people like Nick Cicero, who works nearby.
"I have no idea where the bees came from. All I know is that I was walking around, and I started to walk outside, and they just swarming everywhere," says Nick Cicero.
By mid and late afternoon, the flying bees had huddled together and looked like a giant clump of mud on the side of this building, until you got up close. Then I had to take my irrational fear of bees back to ground level and watch these two men take over.
"This is the most fun we have of all things, especially beekeeping," says Jim Altmiller. Jim Altmiller and Jim Newton got really excited about the opportunity to see the swarm.
They also explained the bees behavior as simply natural, a part of reproduction. "For the most part, you never find a swarm that's really agitated. They have nothing to defend, no food, no brood. The only thing they're trying to do is find a new place," says Altmiller.
Using a shop-vac vacuum, they safely captured the bees in a box they built and brought with them. "The best part about it is that your fear goes away, because once you get stung once or twice, you find out it's not as bad as it sounds," says Jim Newton. "They have nothing to protect, nothing to defend. The only thing they have is a wall. They don't care about that wall. All they care about is making sure they survive."
Witnesses said the swarm sounded like motorcycles in the parking lot several businesses share with the chamber of commerce. The bees didn't attack anyone and no one was hurt.