Been a bit of an up and down week, mostly down, but that leaves a lot of upside.
Had a call from a friends wife, he had been taken to hospital and was worrying about his six colonies. I had to wait for a decent day, but managed to go through them last weekend. One dead, starvation by the looks of it, two drone layers and three very small colonies. This was their first inspection of the year, so I put them into summer mode for him and left his wife with the notes.
The following Monday/Tuesday a batch of Queens was due to turn up, but didn't, nor Wednesday or any other day. This was my first order with this supplier and on contacting him to find out what was happening was told, 'Take it up with your local postman or post office distribution depot.' I have generally found the beekeeping community to be really nice people. Lesson learned. As a pensioner, the total loss of a batch of Queens is a big hit for me. Luckily they were to improve my own stock and were not intended for any of my customers.
Then this weekend, only just warm enough for an inspection, seven days after the last one, Swarm cells in my strongest hive, one of them an enormous thing, already capped. The Queen was still there though, I would guess just waiting for the weather to improve. It took me by surprise, and I closed up quickly while I had a think about what to do next. Although there are capped drone cells in most of my colonies I have not yet seen a drone. Bees do some maddening things at times. I was going to breed from this colony this year. It was my strongest colony last year and produced more honey than any of my others. I didn't want to waste any early opportunity so in the end I decided it was worth the risk to remove the largest Queen cell along with a few bees and put them in a mini nuc. All the other Queen cells I broke down and will revisit this colony in a couple of days. Hopefully with a couple of new frames to work they will settle down.
You spend all Winter worrying about your bees and longing for Spring, and then all hell breaks loose.
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Monday, April 29, 2013
Monday, April 8, 2013
Just a quick look
The weather has been so bad and is forecast to be the same for at least the next few days, in this knowledge I decided to take a quick peek into a couple of hives. It wasn't warm enough and it was too windy, but I was getting increasingly concerned at what I might eventually find, so I caved in, put on my suit and chose two hives at random
There has been so little flying that it was not possible to know what I was likely to find, but to my absolute surprise both hives are heaving with bees, brood and stores. I have no idea where or when they collected it all, but I have had to remove a couple of frames of stores to give the queens some laying room.
If all my colonies are in this condition I will consider myself extremely lucky, And with the early queens arriving over the next few weeks I just need a couple of reasonable days so that I can introduce them into my nucs.
There has been so little flying that it was not possible to know what I was likely to find, but to my absolute surprise both hives are heaving with bees, brood and stores. I have no idea where or when they collected it all, but I have had to remove a couple of frames of stores to give the queens some laying room.
If all my colonies are in this condition I will consider myself extremely lucky, And with the early queens arriving over the next few weeks I just need a couple of reasonable days so that I can introduce them into my nucs.
Thursday, April 4, 2013
What a difference a year makes
Two photos taken a year apart of the same damson tree. The one on the left was taken on 26 March 2012, and the one on the right today, 4 April 2013. On the face of it similar days, sunny, blue skies. But on that day late March 2012 it was a warm 17C, and calm. Today it is hovering just above freezing with a howling north easterly.
I am sure that all my colonies are going to come through this dreadful weather, but what concerns me is the size of those colonies, its a worry. Until I am able to inspect the hives its impossible to gauge the strength of the colonies, some may need moving down to a nucleus box to make it easier for them to maintain temperature. Promised good weather for next week, fingers crossed.
I am sure that all my colonies are going to come through this dreadful weather, but what concerns me is the size of those colonies, its a worry. Until I am able to inspect the hives its impossible to gauge the strength of the colonies, some may need moving down to a nucleus box to make it easier for them to maintain temperature. Promised good weather for next week, fingers crossed.
4 April 2013 |
26 March 2012 |
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