Cover your body with protective clothing so that you do not accidentally get stung by a bee. Wear a shirt with long sleeves, long pants and tube socks. Place some sunglasses or other protective eye covering over your eyes. Place some heavy gloves on your hands to prevent your hands from getting stung and from contact with insect pest spray.
Remove the beehive at night when the bees are less active. The bees will be in the hive and there will not be much activity around the hive.
Cover the honeybee hive with the insect pest spray. Use as much of the bottle as you can to spray the hive down completely.
Leave the insect poison around the hive and surrounding area. Do not approach the hive for a few hours, so that you give the spray and the poison time to work.
Examine the hive and check to see if there still is honeybee activity. Use the second bottle of insect repellent spray if there still are honeybees near the hive.
Remove the hive from where it is attached. Use a pair of garden shears to start cutting the hive away. If honeybees still are actively flying around, you can use the stick to help remove the hive also.
Clear the hive away from the area and place it in a large plastic bag so that the bees cannot get to it.
Clean the surface area where the hive was. Use warm soapy water to wash the area and then rinse the area thoroughly. This will help to prevent the honeybees from coming back to the same spot.