Archive for the ‘It’s my Beeswax…’ Category

“Humble Bees”

Friday, June 3rd, 2011

Every now and then, God’s “lower creatures” tend to humiliate, or, at the very least, humble me. This past week, it was a swarm of bees.

As a beekeeper, I try to stay up on my hives to make sure that they put up honey and don’t swarm. This year, it seems many beekeepers (due to the excessive rain) have had more than their fair share of swarms.

I, in particular, had three swarms. All in the course of 4 days. Of the three swarms, one stands out in my mind.

The first swarm was a “textbook case”. As the bees ramped up in the hive, the workers detected crowding in the hive and made several queen cells, alerting the queen, along with many of the bees in the colony, that it was time to take up residence elsewhere – and that it needed to be done before the new queen emerged.

The bees swarmed into bushes near the bee yard. I noticed the swarm while I was visiting with Nathan as he milked the cow. I setup another hive, donned my bee suit and took up a cardboard box and bee brush as my only defense.

With one hand, I held the box underneath the branch that the cluster of bees was on and with the other, I bent the branch down over the open box and shook the branch with much force. Most of the bees dropped into the box and I brushed the rest off of the branch and into the box.

I immediately took the box to the awaiting empty hive, sitting with the lid off. I banged the box on the ground and opened the lids. I shook the bees into the hive (which had half of the frames in it and half outside the hive). Once I had emptied the contents of the box into the hive, I put the rest of the frames into the hive and covered it.

I checked the bush about an hour later and brushed any stragglers into the box and put them in the hive as well. Pretty much textbook swarm capture.

The next afternoon, I noticed another swarm, but in a different location. I immediately checked the new hive and found the bees happily buzzing in the hive and going to – and – fro. This was not a re-swarm, it was a new swarm.

I followed the previous days method of swarm capture, except I had to take pruners and cut the branch free that they were swarming on, (since it was blackberry and raspberry bushes that they swarmed into)  and all went as planned. I check later in the evening and they were still in the hive.

When I checked at mid-day, there was another swarm in the same place as that second swarm from the previous day. I checked the hive where I had installed the second swarm, and it was empty. So I set about capturing the swarm again (same method as the previous day, including having to cut the branch off so I could shake the bees free). I transferred the bees from the box to the hive one again.

Well, that evening, I checked, and they had swarmed yet again, into the bushes. This time, I removed the hive body and frames used and put in its place an Illinois (medium sized hive body and frames) with mostly all comb already on the frames. As an added measure, Marilyn put lemon grass essential oil in a corner of the hive. I then put it in place and re-captured the swarm.

When I checked the next day, they were happily working the hive. No more swarming. But I l;earned that bees can be pretty temperamental about their living quarters…

The third swarm came a day later – but it was a text-book capture with no unusual tales to tell.

I have now added 3 new bee hives to my bee yard and learned a few things along the way.

 

Busy as a Bee

Thursday, April 21st, 2011

I added supers to all of my Langstroth (commercial-style) bee hives yesterday.  I was amazed at how many bees there were in the hives already. I also checked in on my top bar hive – it has several frames of comb pulled and the bees are off to a good start.
I am hoping for a good nectar flow from the black locust trees in the next few weeks, so I can pull off a lot of the sweet, clear honey that the bees produce from that nectar source.

 

 

Bee updates

Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011

I fed my bees last week – it was in the upper 50′s and they had been flying for 3 days. I fed them sugar water syrup. If it gets in the 50′s again this week, I will feed them syrup again, but I will mix winter green into the syrup for “bee health” and some tea tree oil for mite prevention.

Honeybee Killer Found by Army and Entomologists – NYTimes.com

Friday, October 8th, 2010

With this news, along with the essential oils guide for honey bee management and health, published by the West Virginia University Ag department, beekeepers should be able to overcome CCD.

Tea tree oil (among the list of essential oils used to ward off varroa mites in bee colonies) is a natural anti-fungal.

Read the article here:

Honeybee Killer Found by Army and Entomologists – NYTimes.com.

Read the study on essential oils usage at the ag. page at WVU:

http://www.wvu.edu/~agexten/varroa/varroa2.htm#Revised

Happy bee keeping!

Honey of a Day

Saturday, June 26th, 2010

Today was CSA pick up day here at the farm.
Thursday evening, I had checked my hives and saw that three hives had capped over about half of the frames in the supers.

So, while I was waiting for some of the later arriving CSA customers, I pulled the full frames off of the hives.

I then proceeded (with Sam & Aric’s help) to extract the honey.
I just finished bottling 16 – 1 pound containers and a quart jar full (for us) and still have over 1/2 of a 5 gallon bucket.

I should be able to pull the rest off next weekend. Now, if the other hives (or even if these same 3 hives) up another super full of honey, I’ll be in fine shape…

First beehives from Biblical Israel discovered – Science- msnbc.com

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

In 2008, during a dig at the site Tel Rehov, archaeologists found the remains of honey bees and bee hives (clay pots designed to keep bees).

Carbon dating of grains that were spilled from a broken vessel next to these bee hives indicated that the hives were there over 3000 years ago.

Read the article here:

First beehives from Biblical Israel discovered – Science- msnbc.com.

AFP: China accused of ‘honey laundering’ by US senator

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

Well, a few years back, it was “tainted” honey from China – mixing sugar water and other liquids  with the honey to dilute it and make it go farther.

Now, it seems that the Chinese are using  company “fronts” or “back doors” from other countries to get around the decade-old sanctions. China does this to avoid paying the trade taxes.

They are flooding the US with their honey, since the US consumes over twice the honey that can be consumed by its honey bees.

Read the article here:

AFP: China accused of ‘honey laundering’ by US senator.

gulfnews : Buzz of a problem

Friday, May 7th, 2010

We are at a turning point. It is time for us to raise bees for the sake of the bees.

But, in order to do this, we need to take a different approach. We need to raise our bees as close to the methods used by the ferral bees – using top bar designs, less intrusion in the hive, less use of pesticides and herbicides in the fields where we place our bees, and no use of GMO crops.

We need to grow bee-friendly trees, flowers and plants – not for our benefit, but for theirs. In the end, it will pay off – we can get our honey,  pollinate our crops and save the bees.

I think that the quote below (from the article listed in the link) says it all:

“We have been losing bees and beekeepers in this country for 60 years and now we are at the point where almost half the colonies in the country are needed to pollinate almonds in California,” van Engelsdorp said. “We are close to the margin” of a viable ratio of pollinators to crops, he said. “It’s amazing to see how close we are to that line.”

via gulfnews : Buzz of a problem.

AFP: No single cause for mass die off of honey bees: OIE

Thursday, April 29th, 2010

AFP: No single cause for mass die off of honey bees: OIE.

According to the World Organization for Animal Health (OIE), there is no single factor causing CCD (Colony Collapse Disorder), or the massive sudden die offs of honey bees worldwide.

They [finally] agree that it is man’s mis-management of the honey bees, and nature in general.

Now, I’m not a member of greenpeace, or wanting to reduce the human population to save the planet and I don’t really believe in climate change [global warming].  (I do believe that Al Gore is a pollutant, though).

I do believe, however, that where money is to be made, and where fear and comfort take precedence over cognitive reason, there will be those that turn a blind eye to the devastation that their greed, control and exploitation can do.

And I truly think that this is at the root of the honey bee die-offs.

Check the city ordinance where you live – are you allowed to keep bees in the city limits? What is the procedure followed when a swarm is found and called into the authorities?

What types of plants are you allowed to grow in your neighborhood?

In many communities, it is illegal to raise honey bees. IN most parks, mall parking lots and neighborhoods, there are no bee-friendly plants. No bee-friendly plants, no food for bees.

The OIE is blaming climate change, pesticides, viral and bacterial infections, parasites and the impact of “human activities” [translated to:  migratory | pollinator beekeeper "practices" | pollution | building shopping centers |industry and suburbs where bee fodder once was] on the environment.

For once, I’m afraid I agree with most of what they are saying…

–Pat

A Case of the Hives

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

Well,
I had fully intended to get my Warre Top Bar hives built before the bee season this year. Maybe next year – or, maybe I can get 1 or 2 built and by nucs in May…

I installed 6 packages of bees Sunday afternoon.
I’m getting pretty fast at it -It took all of about 5 minutes for the first one, and around 2 – 3 minutes for the other 5.
I fed them pollen patties yesterday. I have 2 1-gallon “community” feeders set up with sugar-water, to help them pull wax, and to stimulate laying in the queen. They were installed in hives that had pulled comb on the foundation for all or, at least for 7 of the 10 frames, so they have a head start there.

I intend to pull honey off of these hives, so I will be installing individual feeders on each hive this week, along with queen excluders and supers with empty frames (foundation only – no “pulled comb) so the bees can pull comb. If they can get that done by May 1st – 10th, I should be in business, and will pull the feeders off and add additional supers that have pulled comb. That way, then will have plenty of room for putting up honey. This helps me in 2 ways:
1. The bees will be less likely to swarm, since they have the entire brood box for brood, and 2 supers for storing honey.
2. They will have supers with comb – so all they have to do is put the nectar in the cells and start making honey out of it.

We are planting lots and lots of Anise Hyssop (Agastache foeniculum). It is said that 1 acre of anise hyssop can supply 100 beehives with enough nectar to put up 100 pounds of surplus honey per hive. With my 7 bee hives, we should do well.

We are also planting a bee-friendly flower garden, and have some clover in. All of these plants should boost the “nectar economy” and, hopefully will provide enough stores for my bees to overwinter well. Since most of the farms are no longer here, it has been a struggle to support more than 4 hives here with the amount of bloom that has been available.

Add to that the 125 blueberry plants we have, (which will bloom in July) the several hundred strawberries, 40 plus fruit trees, and we could have a good year.
And if the black locust blooms this May, we’ll have a bumper crop of honey!!!

Here’s to a successful beekeeping year!

–Pat