Sunday, June 27, 2010

June 26th 2010 - TBH Inspection

Ray, Linda and Rob joined me at my apiary today. I saved the TBH to last and I was very happy with their progress since last week. The weather has been over 22'C all week and the colony has built a nice amount of comb on 7 bars and the queen has started to lay. I only removed bars 6 & 7 as I could clearly see a small patch of eggs on bar 6 and eggs, larvae and sealed brood on bar 5. As the weather has been so good there is an early nectar flow and the girls are working very hard to collect as much as they can.

To see this movie on YouTube Click here

Tuesday, June 22, 2010

June 22nd Dartington Hive

This year the colony I had in my home made Dartington style hive dwindled to about 100 bees over winter. The queen was only laying a tiny patch of eggs on both sides of one frame as they couldn't keep the required temperatures warm enough, so I moved them out of the Dartington and I put them into a small 4 frame nuc and pretty much thought they wouldn't last long. Sods law although the colony is still small it is growing and although a little feisty if opened, they have survived partly I hope by the 1:1 feed and pollen pattie I've given them. The other hive is the swarm I got a few weeks ago with sadly a drone laying queen.

Today I went to check on these hives to decide if I should remove the drone laying queen then combine them a day or so later.

I suited up and walked towards the two hives and thought wow thats a loud buzzing I can hear. As I looked at the entrances of the two hives there was no more than 5-10 bees flying about outside them both, it suddenly dawned on me the noise was coming from the Dartington hive as I looked across towards it trying to peer through the long grass where I abandoned it 20 feet away from the other hives to see there was 30+ bees flying around the entrance.

My first thought was they were drawn to the empty combs and the smell looking for stores to rob until I got close enough to see the entrance and about 20 more bees were walking around on the front of the hive. I removed the roof and tried to gently prized up the crown board with my hive tool only to find it seemed unusually heavy, so I put the smoker down and using both hands lifted one side of the crown board up and peered under it to see a large natural comb about 10" wide and 12" deep and the whole entrance end of the hive was full of bees covering the 3 empty frames I left in there and covering the walls, crown board and the natural comb they have built since they moved in. I carefully smoked the bees off the crown board and removed the natural comb and lent it against the side wall so they could access the stores they put in it still and quickly grabbed three more 14x12 frames with foundation I had with me so they have 6 frames.

Happy Days

The Dartington style hive in its old location on the right.

Sunday, June 20, 2010

June 19th - Top Bar Hive

After 4 pints of feed the colony in the top bar hive have built enough comb I can see it. So I have stopped feeding as I could see on closer inspection without needing to lift out any of the bars they have now started to store some nectar in the visible comb.

To view this movie on YouTube click here

Monday, June 14, 2010

June 4th Swarm in Top Bar Hive

No visible combs after two weeks.

Since hiving them all they seem to be doing is clustering on the left side of the hive covering 6-7 bars. I would of expected to see some brand new comb by now which lead me to think they were starving so I decided late yesterday to give them 2 pints of 1:1. I had a quick look at the feeder today which only had about 1/4 of a pint left so they were definitely hungry. Traffic at the entrance is good but considering their size I would of expected a lot more. No idea on the status of the queen yet but I will continue to feed them now and hope to see some progress soon.

Monday, June 7, 2010

June 6th 2010

Oil Seed Rape - Extraction

One of my apiary's is only half a mile away from several very large fields of OSR which have just finished flowering for the year. I removed the super's to extract them or the nectar would of quickly crystallized and set solid. After a quick inspection I had 26 frames in total from 3 supers which passed the flick test to check if they were ready to be extracted the rest I left on the hive. Some of the extracted frames still had large amounts of semi solid OSR which could not be spun out so I will cut out the foundation and gently melt them down to separate the wax and then feed this back later in the year.

32.7 Lbs over all

Friday, June 4, 2010

June 4th 2010

I've been mentoring a couple who have a hive at my apiary. A while ago I advised them to put their spare hive out in their back garden as a bait hive. I got a call from them saying a swarm descended into their garden and entered their hive.

Then at about midday my mobile and then my home phone rang, my mum told me about a swarm in one of her friends gardens. 20 minutes later armed with a camera and top bar nuc I'm smiling from ear to ear even though it is only looks like a small cast. (Queen not seen)

Every swarm collectors dream as they were less than 2 feet off the floor.



They swarmed on the 1st May with a similar size cluster which was collected by another keeper, then they tried to swarm again yesterday but returned to the hive after 2 hours which upset the beek who came to try and collect them.

Today
By the time I arrived today at about 12:30 they had been out for about 2.5 hours.

They came from a feral colony who have been in an old decorative chimney pot at the bottom of the garden for about 3 years. Each year they have thrown 2-3 swarms of roughly equal sizes.

To see the movie on YouTube Click here