Posts Tagged ‘Honey Bees’

bee surprised

August 3rd, 2010

I’ve been surprised to continually see activity in two of my bee hives.  I had abandoned my bees for the summer and expected them to disappear since none of the hives had queens.  I had an opportunity with the sunny weather we’ve been having to suit up and check things out.  First I setup my top bar beehive even though it’s much to late to get bees in there.  Maybe next year I’ll be able to produce a queen or catch a swarm.

When I discovered I no longer had queens in my hives I started the process of trying to rebuild a colony.  Since the weather was so bad for bees and the beekeeper we know could not spare any queens we tried to setup a hive to make our own.  We learned that you can reduce a regular super down to four frames to make a nuke.  This way once the queen is established you can just add more frames and another super instead of trying to transfer everything over to where you want it.  We also learned that a worker bee can lay an egg to produce a queen bee.  Unfortunately I got caught with bad weather and then no time to finish what we had started.  I put a queen cap into the four frame nuke and closed it up but never got a chance to see if there was fresh larvae and try to do the grafting.  That was a month ago.  As it appears now the bees made their own queen and populated the nuke.  I didn’t find the queen but there are more bees there now then when I setup the nukes.  I opened up the super, added the rest of the frames and closed it up.  Hopefully I’ll be have a couple of hives to winter.

mid july update – honey bees and me

July 19th, 2010

I’ve basically had to abandon my bees for this year.  I lost the queens in my two colonies.  I had reduced the hives and was in the process of trying to requeen them myself.  Unfortunately between my available time and the weather I could not get at them to complete the tasks.  The one colony still has bees hanging around but I’m pretty sure they still don’t have a queen.  Hopefully soon I will get a chance to take a look (preferably not in the rain).

ok, I did escape for a couple of days for a little r and r up north…

building top bar beehive part ii

May 30th, 2010

The top bar beehive is being built from mostly left over parts and miscellaneous lumber.  Installing a window seemed like a must purely for the enjoyment of watching what the bees will be busy with.  I still need to add a screen to the bottom, drill the holes for the bee entrances and finish off the lid.  I’m also thinking a cover for the window and bottom screen would be useful.  I’m not exactly sure how I will over winter this style of hive but I’ll work on that closer to fall.

I used left over commercial frame tops for my top bars.  They are a bit narrower then what I see is recommended but I’m still hoping they will work.  Using these tops saved a lot of time in preperation since they are already formed and have a groove in the center.  I melted down some old wax and poured it into the center of the top bars.  I learned it is easier to clean up the spillage if you let the wax cool a little before putting it on or scrapping it off rite away before it hardens.  You can get a sense of my learning curve from the various states of the top bars in the picture above.